1. Sexual abuse, antisocial behaviour and substance use: gender differences in young community adolescents.
- Author
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Bergen, Helen A., Martin, Graham, Richardson, Angela S., Allison, Stephen, and Roeger, Leigh
- Subjects
- *
ADOLESCENCE , *SEX crimes , *DRUG abuse , *ANTISOCIAL personality disorders ,SEX differences (Biology) - Abstract
To investigate gender-specific relationships between self-reported sexual abuse, antisocial behaviour and substance use in a large community sample of adolescents. A cross-sectional study of students aged, on average, 13 (n = 2596), 14 (n = 2475) and 15 years (n = 2290), from 27 schools in South Australia with a questionnaire including sexual abuse, frequency and severity of substance use, depressive symptomatology (CES-D), family functioning (McMaster Family Assessment Device), and antisocial behaviour (an adapted 22-item Self-Report Delinquency Scale). Logistic regression analyses using HLM V5.05 with a population-average model were conducted. In the model considered, reported sexual abuse is significantly independently associated with antisocial behaviour, controlling for confounding factors of depressive symptomatology and family dysfunction, with increased risks of three- to eightfold for sexually abused boys, and two- to threefold for sexually abused girls, compared to nonabused. Increased risks of extreme substance use in sexually abused girls (age 13) and boys (ages 13โ15) are more than fourfold, compared to nonabused. Age differences were not statistically significant. Childhood sexual abuse is a risk factor for the development of antisocial behaviour and substance use in young adolescents. Clinicians should be aware of gender differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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