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Assault victim.

Past sexual assault triples risk of future assault for college women

By CATHY WILDE

Published September 2, 2014 This content is archived.

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Kathleen Parks.
“Initially, we were attempting to see if victimization increased drinking and if drinking then increased future risk. Instead, we found that the biggest predictor of future victimization is not drinking, but past victimization. ”
Kathleen Parks, senior research scientist
Research Institute on Addictions

Disturbing news for women on college campuses: A new study from UB’s Research Institute on Addictions (RIA) indicates that female college students who are victims of sexual assault are at a much higher risk of becoming victims again.

In fact, researchers found that college women who experienced severe sexual victimization were three times more likely than their peers to experience severe sexual victimization the following year.

RIA researchers followed nearly 1,000 college women, most age 18 to 21, over a five-year period, studying their drinking habits and experiences of severe physical and sexual assault. Severe physical victimization includes assaults with or without a weapon. Severe sexual victimization includes rape and attempted rape, including incapacitated rape, where a victim is too intoxicated from drugs or alcohol to provide consent.

Kathleen A. Parks, senior research scientist, is the study’s principal investigator.

“Initially, we were attempting to see if victimization increased drinking and if drinking then increased future risk,” Parks says. “Instead, we found that the biggest predictor of future victimization is not drinking, but past victimization.”

The study provided some good news, however. “We found that severe sexual victimization decreased across the years in college,” Parks says.

In light of the recent report from the White House Task Force to Protect Students from Sexual Assault, the study shows that campuses need to be aware of the increased risk of future victimization for women who have experienced sexual assault, the researchers say.

Colleges also must keep an eye out for long-term drinking problems with trauma victims: Women who were victims showed an increase in drinking in the year following their assaults, perhaps as a coping mechanism. “Our findings show that women who have been victims may need to be followed for many months to a year to see if their drinking increases,” Parks says.

Her previous research has shown that freshman college women have a much higher likelihood of victimization if they partake in binge drinking. (For more information on the role of alcohol in college sexual assault, see RIA’s recent Expert Summary on the subject). 

The current study appeared in the online edition of Psychology of Addictive Behaviors in August and was co-authored by Clara M. Bradizza, RIA senior research scientist; Ya-Ping Hsieh, former data analyst at RIA; and Caroline Taggart, former RIA project director. It was funded through a grant from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.