ABSTRACT
There are a multitude of behaviors that child sexual abusers use to ‘groom’ children into becoming vulnerable to abuse. In this study of 277 adult survivors of child sexual abuse, participants advised the many ways they were groomed into being abused by up to three perpetrators. The effects of three categories of grooming (Verbal Coercion, Grooming that used Drugs/Alcohol, and Threatening/Violent Grooming) were examined for their effects on trauma symptom severity. Using Linear Regressions, each grooming category had a significant predictive effect on trauma symptom severity. Multiple Linear Regressions revealed that for most trauma symptoms, Threatening/Violent Grooming was a significant predictor of trauma symptom severity, even when other more well-known variables were controlled for (including age at onset of abuse, relationship to perpetrator, and severity of abuse), with a notable exception of verbal coercion as a significant predictor of sexual problems in adulthood (i.e. not satisfied, low drive, overactivity, confusion, bad thoughts or feelings).
Disclosure of Interest
The authors have no financial or personal relationships that would bias the work being submitted.
Ethical Standards and Informed Consent
All procedures followed were in accordance with the ethical standards of the responsible committee on human experimentation [institutional and national] and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2000. Informed consent was obtained from all patients for being included in the study
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Molly R. Wolf
Molly R. Wolf, LMSW, PhD, is an Associate Professor in the Social Work Department at Edinboro University of Pennsylvania.
Doyle K. Pruitt
Doyle K. Pruitt, PhD, LCSW-R, is the MSW Program Director and an Associate Professor at Keuka College in Keuka Park NY and a psychotherapist in private practice in Canandaigua, NY.