Summary Sheet 6

This is a short summary of ACSSA Issues Paper No. 6 (December 2006)
Services for victim/survivors of sexual assault: Identifying needs, interventions and provision of services in Australia
by Jill Astbury

 

Impacts of sexual assault

Research has documented a range of physical and psychological impacts of sexual assault, ranging from immediate to long term. Being better informed about the psychological effects of sexual violence would greatly assist family and friends of survivors to feel more confident in providing support and understanding.

Barriers to accessing services

The process of silencing women about sexual violence occurs from the macro level of social discourses and representations, through to the micro level of interpersonal interactions. Barriers to reporting and disclosure are also barriers to victim/survivors accessing the specialist services they might require. These barriers may complicate and compound the psychosocial burden already carried by survivors.

Disclosure and Support

Survivors have fewer physical and emotional health problems when they have someone:

Other people’s confirmation that a serious crime has occurred coupled with an offer of support is instrumental in persuading many survivors to report to police. However survivors often report negative experiences of reporting sexual assault to police.

Needs specifically related to the time when the sexual assault occurred include medical help and practical help such as getting to the police or accessing advice on available options.

Common threads in the narratives of victim/survivors around their needs at the time of disclosure include:

Australian services

The National Association of Services Against Sexual Violence (NASASV) identified some 118 sexual violence services in 2000. These services continue to be informed by feminist notions of practice and situate the crime of sexual violence as an abuse of rights, particularly the rights of women and children. Statistical information was collected on service users over a 3-week period in 2000, from 37 Australian services (see main paper for more detail).

Interventions

Stages of the healing process:

  1. The establishment of safety
  2. Remembrance and mourning
  3. Reconnection with ordinary life.

The main focus of mental health interventions for victim/survivors of sexual violence include issues of guilt, shame, anxiety, depression, hypervigilance, anger, mood swings, and social discomfort.

Naming sexual assault is seen by researchers and therapists as essential to recovery, however many women (for a range of reasons) do not name their experience as sexual assault even though it meets legal definitions of rape. Sexual assault services can provide an antidote to the culture of censorship and silence that victims can experience in the wider society. The literature identifies two main psychotherapeutic approaches in relation to the treatment of victims of sexual assault: cognitive therapies and feminist (or group) therapy.

Cognitive therapies
The goal of cognitive therapy is to change psychological distress by challenging and changing distorted cognitions (thoughts). Types of therapy include:

Feminist therapies

Further research is needed to identify the precise mental health outcomes associated with the feminist, rights based approach to counselling used by these services.

Primary Health care

Health care workers must strive to be as unlike the perpetrator as possible in all their interactions with victim/survivors. A non-directive, woman-centred therapeutic approach is indicated. This is in contrast to the more directive approach commonly used in health care settings (where the worker gives directions to the client who is expected to follow these directions).

Important questions for primary health care- physical examinations and gynecological care:

*Is there any way this procedure or the manner in which I am carrying it out might be humiliating or traumatic to victims of sexual violence?

*How can I engage women in shared decision making around this kind of clinical care to maximise them feeling safe, informed and in control of what happens?

To provide psychological support, both the words and actions of the health care provider must demonstrate to the victimised girl or woman (who has taken the risk of trusting that provider with her disclosure of violence) that the provider:

 

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