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PTSD and Substance Use as Pathways of Adolescent Girls Sexual Revictimization: A Prospective Study

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  • Childhood sexual abuse predicted later sexual revictimisation, including sexual harassment, among adolescent girls in a large prospective sample.
  • Post-traumatic stress symptoms and substance use jointly mediated the association between prior childhood sexual abuse and subsequent sexual victimisation.
  • Findings indicate interventions should address PTSD symptoms and substance use to reduce sexual revictimisation risk among adolescent girls.
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J Child Adolesc Trauma. 2025 Aug 30;19(2):561-571. doi: 10.1007/s40653-025-00737-7. eCollection 2026 Jun.

ABSTRACT

Childhood sexual abuse (CSA) is associated with adverse outcomes such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms, substance use and a higher risk for sexual revictimization (Scoglio et al., 2021). While adolescents represent the most high-risk group to experience sexual violence, especially teenage girls, the majority of studies on revictimization have been conducted with adult samples (Conroy & Cotter, 2017). In addition, in examining sexual revictimization, studies have focused on contact forms of sexual violence, neglecting other prevalent forms of victimization, namely sexual harassment (Brown et al., 2020). This prospective study aimed to 1) investigate the association between CSA and sexual revictimization, including sexual harassment, and 2) determine whether PTSD and substance use mediate the association between CSA and sexual revictimization among teenage girls. A total of 3985 adolescent girls (M = 15.39 years old; SD = .96) completed questionnaires that assessed experiences of sexual violence, other adverse childhood events, PTSD symptoms and substance use. Results unveiled a significant indirect effect, where PTSD and substance use mediated the relationship between a history of CSA and later sexual victimization. Findings underscore the importance of addressing PTSD symptoms and substance use in intervention, as they appear to be mechanisms underlying sexual revictimization.

PMID:42179391 | PMC:PMC13190869 | DOI:10.1007/s40653-025-00737-7

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