NCJ Number
143402
Journal
Journal of Interpersonal Violence Volume: 8 Issue: 2 Dated: (June 1993) Pages: 155-168
Date Published
1993
Length
14 pages
Annotation
This study compared 17 psychosocial characteristics of three groups of nonoffending mothers of sexually abused children.
Abstract
The groups were composed of 36 (36.4 percent) mothers of children abused by partners (incest victims), 30 (30.3 percent) mothers of children abused by other relatives, and 33 (33.3 percent) mothers of children abused by nonrelatives. Only physical abuse by a partner differentiated the groups; mothers of children sexually abused by a partner were more likely to report a history of domestic violence than mothers in either of the two other groups. Maternal self-reported symptom distress was measured across all three groups using the SCL-90-R. A multiple- regression analysis of the psychosocial characteristics on the SCL-90-R's Global Severity Index indicated that a mother's perceived aloneness in facing this crisis and a personal history of adult sexual assault were positively related to current symptom distress. Despite its limitations, the study challenges the negative stereotypes associated with mothers of incest victims and indicates that these women are secondary victims of abuse. Like most other nonoffending mothers, they tended to believe their children's allegations and to be highly distressed in the aftermath of these disclosures. Implications of the findings are discussed with respect to future research and clinical work with nonoffending mothers of sexually abused children. 3 tables and 29 references