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2014 ; 63
(8
): 1-18
Nephropedia Template TP
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English Wikipedia
Prevalence and characteristics of sexual violence, stalking, and intimate partner
violence victimization--national intimate partner and sexual violence survey,
United States, 2011
#MMPMID25188037
Breiding MJ
; Smith SG
; Basile KC
; Walters ML
; Chen J
; Merrick MT
MMWR Surveill Summ
2014[Sep]; 63
(8
): 1-18
PMID25188037
show ga
PROBLEM/CONDITION: Sexual violence, stalking, and intimate partner violence are
public health problems known to have a negative impact on millions of persons in
the United States each year, not only by way of immediate harm but also through
negative long-term health impacts. Before implementation of the National Intimate
Partner and Sexual Violence Survey (NISVS) in 2010, the most recent detailed
national data on the public health burden from these forms of violence were
obtained from the National Violence against Women Survey conducted during
1995-1996. This report examines sexual violence, stalking, and intimate partner
violence victimization using data from 2011. The report describes the overall
prevalence of sexual violence, stalking, and intimate partner violence
victimization; racial/ethnic variation in prevalence; how types of perpetrators
vary by violence type; and the age at which victimization typically begins. For
intimate partner violence, the report also examines a range of negative impacts
experienced as a result of victimization, including the need for services.
REPORTING PERIOD: January-December, 2011. DESCRIPTION OF SYSTEM: NISVS is a
national random-digit-dial telephone survey of the noninstitutionalized English-
and Spanish-speaking U.S. population aged ?18 years. NISVS gathers data on
experiences of sexual violence, stalking, and intimate partner violence among
adult women and men in the United States by using a dual-frame sampling strategy
that includes both landline and cellular telephones. The survey was conducted in
50 states and the District of Columbia; in 2011, the second year of NISVS data
collection, 12,727 interviews were completed, and 1,428 interviews were partially
completed. RESULTS: In the United States, an estimated 19.3% of women and 1.7% of
men have been raped during their lifetimes; an estimated 1.6% of women reported
that they were raped in the 12 months preceding the survey. The case count for
men reporting rape in the preceding 12 months was too small to produce a
statistically reliable prevalence estimate. An estimated 43.9% of women and 23.4%
of men experienced other forms of sexual violence during their lifetimes,
including being made to penetrate, sexual coercion, unwanted sexual contact, and
noncontact unwanted sexual experiences. The percentages of women and men who
experienced these other forms of sexual violence victimization in the 12 months
preceding the survey were an estimated 5.5% and 5.1%, respectively. An estimated
15.2% of women and 5.7% of men have been a victim of stalking during their
lifetimes. An estimated 4.2% of women and 2.1% of men were stalked in the 12
months preceding the survey. With respect to sexual violence and stalking, female
victims reported predominantly male perpetrators, whereas for male victims, the
sex of the perpetrator varied by the specific form of violence examined. Male
rape victims predominantly had male perpetrators, but other forms of sexual
violence experienced by men were either perpetrated predominantly by women (i.e.,
being made to penetrate and sexual coercion) or split more evenly among male and
female perpetrators (i.e., unwanted sexual contact and noncontact unwanted sexual
experiences). In addition, male stalking victims also reported a more even mix of
males and females who had perpetrated stalking against them. The lifetime and
12-month prevalences of rape by an intimate partner for women were an estimated
8.8% and 0.8%, respectively; an estimated 0.5% of men experienced rape by an
intimate partner during their lifetimes, although the case count for men
reporting rape by an intimate partner in the preceding 12 months was too small to
produce a statistically reliable prevalence estimate. An estimated 15.8% of women
and 9.5% of men experienced other forms of sexual violence by an intimate partner
during their lifetimes, whereas an estimated 2.1% of both men and women
experienced these forms of sexual violence by a partner in the 12 months before
taking the survey. Severe physical violence by an intimate partner (including
acts such as being hit with something hard, being kicked or beaten, or being
burned on purpose) was experienced by an estimated 22.3% of women and 14.0% of
men during their lifetimes and by an estimated 2.3% of women and 2.1% of men in
the 12 months before taking the survey. Finally, the lifetime and 12-month
prevalence of stalking by an intimate partner for women was an estimated 9.2% and
2.4%, respectively, while the lifetime and 12-month prevalence for men was an
estimated 2.5% and 0.8%, respectively. Many victims of sexual violence, stalking,
and intimate partner violence were first victimized at a young age. Among female
victims of completed rape, an estimated 78.7% were first raped before age 25
years (40.4% before age 18 years). Among male victims who were made to penetrate
a perpetrator, an estimated 71.0% were victimized before age 25 years (21.3%
before age 18 years). In addition, an estimated 53.8% of female stalking victims
and 47.7% of male stalking victims were first stalked before age 25 years (16.3%
of female victims and 20.5% of male victims before age 18 years). Finally, among
victims of contact sexual violence, physical violence, or stalking by an intimate
partner, an estimated 71.1% of women and 58.2% of men first experienced these or
other forms of intimate partner violence before age 25 years (23.2% of female
victims and 14.1% of male victims before age 18 years). INTERPRETATION: A
substantial proportion of U.S. female and male adults have experienced some form
of sexual violence, stalking, or intimate partner violence at least once during
their lifetimes, and the sex of perpetrators varied by the specific form of
violence examined. In addition, a substantial number of U.S. adults experienced
sexual violence, stalking, or intimate partner violence during the 12 months
preceding the 2011 survey. Consistent with previous studies, the overall pattern
of results suggest that women, in particular, are heavily impacted over their
lifetime. However, the results also indicate that many men experience sexual
violence, stalking, and, in particular, physical violence by an intimate partner.
Because of the broad range of short- and long-term consequences known to be
associated with these forms of violence, the public health burden of sexual
violence, stalking, and intimate partner violence is substantial. RESULTS suggest
that these forms of violence frequently are experienced at an early age because a
majority of victims experienced their first victimization before age 25 years,
with a substantial proportion experiencing victimization in childhood or
adolescence. PUBLIC HEALTH ACTION: Because a substantial proportion of sexual
violence, stalking, and intimate partner violence is experienced at a young age,
primary prevention of these forms of violence must begin early. Prevention
efforts should take into consideration that female sexual violence and stalking
victimization is perpetrated predominately by men and that a substantial
proportion of male sexual violence and stalking victimization (including rape,
unwanted sexual contact, noncontact unwanted sexual experiences, and stalking)
also is perpetrated by men. CDC seeks to prevent these forms of violence with
strategies that address known risk factors for perpetration and by changing
social norms and behaviors by using bystander and other prevention strategies. In
addition, primary prevention of intimate partner violence is focused on the
promotion of healthy relationship behaviors and other protective factors, with
the goal of helping adolescents develop these positive behaviors before their
first relationships. The early promotion of healthy relationships while behaviors
are still relatively modifiable makes it more likely that young persons can avoid
violence in their relationships.
|Adolescent
[MESH]
|Adult
[MESH]
|Crime Victims/*statistics & numerical data
[MESH]
|Data Collection
[MESH]
|Ethnicity/psychology/statistics & numerical data
[MESH]
|Female
[MESH]
|Humans
[MESH]
|Male
[MESH]
|Middle Aged
[MESH]
|Prevalence
[MESH]
|Sex Distribution
[MESH]
|Sex Offenses/ethnology/*statistics & numerical data
[MESH]
|Sexual Partners/*psychology
[MESH]
|Spouse Abuse/ethnology/*statistics & numerical data
[MESH]