Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T07:13:55.387Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Invited commentary on: Abusive experiences and psychiatric morbidity in women primary care attenders

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Paul E. Mullen*
Affiliation:
Monash University, Clinical Director, Victorian Institute of Forensic Mental Health, Thomas Embling Hospital, Locked Bag 10, Fairfield, Victoria 3078, Australia. Tel: 3 9495 9136; fax: 3 9495 9195; e-mail: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © 2003 The Royal College of Psychiatrists 

Child sexual abuse has come to occupy a position of pre-eminence among the various forms of childhood disadvantage. This priority has had useful social and political consequences in galvanising public concern and driving attempts both to protect children from sexual exploitation and to assist those who fall victim to such abuse. The precedence accorded child sexual abuse has also had negative consequences, socially and scientifically, particularly in distracting attention away from physical and emotional abuse, and from the whole context of disadvantage and neglect in which the sexual abuse often occurs. The research of Jeremy Coid and colleagues (Coid et al, 2003, this issue) deserves praise for contributing to what is now a substantial body of research which has, over the past decade, attempted to return child sexual abuse to its appropriate context as one, not the, form of childhood adversity (Reference Mullen, Martin and AndersonMullen et al, 1993; Reference Finkelhor and Dzinba-LeathermanFinkelhor & Dzinba-Leatherman, 1994; Reference Fergusson, Horwood and LynskeyFergusson et al, 1997; Reference Fleming, Mullen and BammerFleming et al, 1997; Reference Molnar, Berkman and BukaMolnar et al, 2001). Their study concludes that a history of child sexual abuse has few associations with adult mental health measures, and specifically no association with depressive and anxiety disorders. This conclusion is in stark contrast to the vast majority of studies on the impact of sexual abuse in childhood on adult mental health, and specifically to studies that have also incorporated statistical controls to take account of other forms of abuse, as well as the family and social background of victims (Reference Mullen, Martin and AndersonMullen et al, 1996; Reference Fleming, Mullen and SibthorpeFleming et al, 1999; Reference Zuravin and FontanellaZuravin & Fontanella, 1999; Reference Molnar, Berkman and BukaMolnar et al, 2001). If in science in general, and epidemiology in particular, you keep asking the same question over and over again eventually you will, purely from the play of chance, obtain an answer at variance with previous answers. This, however, is probably not a sufficient explanation of these aberrant findings. The question that needs addressing is why this study has failed to go where so many have gone before. The answer is almost certainly to be found in the methodology.

In this area of epidemiological research a rough hierarchy can be constructed of the methods of sampling in ascending order of sophistication and reliability. Case reports are at the bottom, followed by case series, convenience samples and random community samples, with birth cohort and twin studies vying for top spot. Prospective methodologies trump retrospective ones but in this area they are a great rarity (Reference Calam, Horne and GlasgowCalam et al, 1998; Reference Horwitz, Widom and McLaughlinHorwitz et al, 2001). Studies that measure relevant family and social factors together with other abuse variables, and employ multivariate analysis, are to be preferred. An excellent example of such a study is that of Salter and colleagues, who disentangled the effects of multiple confounding variables on the relationship between child sexual abuse in boys and subsequent sexually aggressive behaviours (Reference Salter, McMillan and RichardsSalter et al, 2003). The study of Coid and colleagues falls into the category of a non-random convenience sample, investigated retrospectively, with a range of relevant factors evaluated and entered into a multivariate analysis. This is an acceptable, if not leading-edge, methodology. Caution should, however, be exercised in rejecting on the basis of such a study the conclusions of both more sophisticated studies, and more rigorous studies employing a similar methodology (Reference Hill, Davis and ByattHill et al, 2000).

The researchers’ response rate (55%), calculated after excluding 15% of the original sample, was acceptable, if not impressive. The ascertainment of abuse experiences does not appear to be based on any of the established, and standardised, instruments or approaches. The use of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale may not impress readers as an appropriate instrument for eliciting psychopathological symptoms in this population. The reported levels of abuse experiences during adult life, specifically domestic violence (41%), rape (8%) and sexual assault (9%), were unusually high if compared with random community samples. It is in this latter aspect of the study that the difficulty in establishing an association between child sexual abuse and most mental health outcomes may in part reside.

There is no doubt that coexisting abuse and disadvantage may confound the association between child sexual abuse and adverse mental health outcomes. That domestic violence has an even stronger association with mental disorder than does sexual abuse in childhood, and that child and adult abuse interact, has long been documented (Reference Mullen, Romans-Clarkson and WaltonMullen et al, 1988; Reference Follette, Polusny and BechtleFollette et al, 1996; Reference Fleming, Mullen and SibthorpeFleming et al, 1999). This creates a particular problem in a population in which over half have a history of domestic violence or adult sexual assault. In such a population one would expect bivariate analysis to demonstrate a significant association between child sexual abuse and depressive and anxiety disorders. This, the authors indicate, was indeed the case, although they do not document the level of that association. When it comes to multivariate analysis the problems of variance stealing, and in particular the influence of the 41% of participants with a history of domestic violence, may well have drowned the still small voice of child sexual abuse. No amount of sophistication in a multivariate analysis will, in my opinion, stop the effects of sexual abuse in childhood being obscured by the presence of so much severe adult abuse.

The paper by Coid et al contains the claim that previous studies have either not measured the confounding effects of childhood physical abuse, or have not included it in a logistic regression model. This is simply not true. Our group was not the first, and certainly not the last, to investigate this. For example, in our 1996 study on a random community sample we demonstrated that it was physical abuse that ceased to retain a significant association with mental health variables in the logistic regression in which child sexual abuse, physical abuse and emotional abuse were all entered. Childhood sexual abuse, however, continued to be associated with being a psychiatric case on the Present State Examination (OR=2.0, 95% CI 1.4–2.9) and with depression in particular (OR=1.8, 95% CI 1.3–2.5). In that study we warned that the long-term effect of physical abuse could have been obscured by variance stealing related to the close relationship of physical abuse to other forms of abuse and adversity in the developmental histories of the participants (Reference Mullen, Martin and AndersonMullen et al, 1996). This becomes an even greater problem when variables related to abuse in adult life are added to the mix. Perhaps a similar warning would have been appropriate with regard to the apparent absence of an effect of child sexual abuse on depressive and anxiety disorders in this study.

In summary, we should welcome studies such as this which examine child sexual abuse in the context of other forms of abuse and adversity, during both childhood and adult life. The weight accorded to any particular conclusion or claim must, however, depend on the methodological sophistication of the study on which it is based in relation to the existing literature. Nobody should conclude on the basis of this paper that a real doubt has now been cast over the association between child sexual abuse and subsequent adverse mental health outcomes. Anyone in any doubt over how substantial the evidence is for this association should consult the report of Andrews and his colleagues to the World Health Organization (Reference Andrews, Corry and SladeAndrews et al, 2002). There are still those who would obscure and obfuscate the dreadful consequences of childhood abuse in general, and child sexual abuse in particular, and it would be shameful if such people were encouraged, however inadvertently, by this study.

References

Andrews, G. Corry, J. Slade, T. et al (2002) Comparative Risk Assessment: Child Sexual Abuse. Final Report. http://www.crufad.com/research/report.pdf/ CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calam, R. Horne, L. Glasgow, D. et al (1998) Psychological disturbance and child sexual abuse: a follow up study. Child Abuse and Neglect, 22, 901913.Google Scholar
Fergusson, D. M. Horwood, L. J. & Lynskey, M. T. (1997) Childhood sexual abuse, adolescent sexual behaviors and sexual revictimization. Child Abuse and Neglect, 21, 789803.Google Scholar
Finkelhor, D. & Dzinba-Leatherman, J. (1994) Children as victims of violence: a national survey. Paediatrics, 94, 410420.Google Scholar
Fleming, J. Mullen, P. & Bammer, G. (1997) A study of potential risk factors for sexual abuse in childhood. Child Abuse and Neglect, 23, 791802.Google Scholar
Fleming, J. Mullen, P. Sibthorpe, B. et al (1999) The long-term impact of child sexual abuse in Australian women. Child Abuse and Neglect, 23, 145159.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Follette, V. M. Polusny, M. A. Bechtle, A. E. et al (1996) Cumulative trauma: the impact of child sexual abuse, adult sexual assault and spouse abuse. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 9, 2535.Google Scholar
Hill, J. Davis, R. Byatt, M. et al (2000) Childhood sexual abuse and affective symptoms in women: a general population study. Psychological Medicine, 30, 12831291.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Horwitz, A. V. Widom, C. S. McLaughlin, J. et al (2001) The impact of childhood abuse and neglect on adult mental health: a prospective study. Journal of Health and Social Behaviour, 42, 184201.Google Scholar
Molnar, B. E. Berkman, L. F. & Buka, S. L. (2001) Psychopathology, childhood sexual abuse and other childhood adversities: relative links to subsequent suicidal behaviour. Psychological Medicine, 31, 965977.Google Scholar
Mullen, P. E. Romans-Clarkson, S. E. Walton, V. et al (1988) Impact of sexual and physical abuse on women's mental health. Lancet, i, 841846.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mullen, P. E. Martin, J. L. Anderson, J. C. et al (1993) Childhood sexual abuse and mental health in adult life. British Journal of Psychiatry, 163, 721732.Google Scholar
Mullen, P. E. Martin, J. L. Anderson, J. C. et al (1996) The long-term impact of the physical, emotional, and sexual abuse of children: a community study. Child Abuse and Neglect, 20, 721.Google Scholar
Salter, D. McMillan, D. Richards, M. et al (2003) Development of sexually abusive behaviour in sexually victimised males: a longitudinal study. Lancet, 361, 471476.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zuravin, S. J. & Fontanella, C. (1999) The relationship between child sexual abuse and major depression among low-income women: a function of growing up experiences? Child Maltreatment: Journal of the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children, 3, 412.Google Scholar
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.