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Paper Title

A CONCEPTUAL ANALYSIS OF RAPE VICTIMIZATION Long-Term Effects and Implications for Treatment

Keywords

  • Rape Victimization
  • Long-Term Effects
  • Trauma Recovery
  • Post-Traumatic Responses
  • Cognitive Appraisal
  • Cognitive Adaptation
  • Coping Mechanisms
  • Psychological Impact
  • Chronic Trauma
  • Psychotherapy Utilization
  • Treatment Approaches
  • Stress Responses
  • Clinical Interventions
  • Sexual Violence Survivors
  • Mental Health Support
  • Delayed Help-Seeking
  • Empirical Research
  • Conceptual Analysis

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 13 | Issue : 1 | Page No : 27-40

Published On

March, 1989

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Abstract

Recent prevalence studies have suggested that 15-22% of women have been raped at some point in their lives, many by close acquaintances, although few victims seek assistance services or professional psychotherapy immediately post-assault. Surveys have revealed that 31–48% of rape victims eventually sought professional psychotherapy, often years after the actual assault. These observations suggest that the primary role of clinicians in the treatment of rape victims is the identification and handling of chronic, post-traumatic responses to a nonrecent experience. However, it is concluded that most of the existing literature on rape treatment addresses only the target symptoms that represent the immediate response to rape. In this article, contemporary theoretical and empirical discussions of stress, cognitive appraisal, cognitive adaptation, and coping are used to conceptualize the long-term impact of rape and the process of resolution. Directions for future research on the clinical treatment of rape are suggested.

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