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Paper Title

Cognitive mediation of rape's mental, physical and social health impact: Tests of four models in cross-sectional data.

Keywords

  • Rape Trauma
  • Cognitive Mediation
  • Mental Health
  • Physical Health
  • Social Health
  • PTSD Symptoms
  • Psychological Distress
  • Self-Blame
  • Maladaptive Beliefs
  • Social Maladjustment
  • Trauma Impact
  • Health Outcomes
  • Sexual Violence
  • Psychological Symptoms
  • Cross-Sectional Study
  • Survivor Well-Being

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 70 | Issue : 4 | Page No : 926–941

Published On

February, 2002

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Abstract

Four nested, theoretically specified, increasingly complex models were tested representing cognitive mediation of rape's effects on mental, physical, and social health. Data were cross-sectional (N = 253 rape survivors). Outcomes were standardized assessments of social maladjustment, physical, and psychological symptoms, including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The best-fitting model was not fully cognitively mediated. Personological and rape characteristics influenced the level of self-blame experienced and the intensity of maladaptive beliefs about self and others. Self-blame and maladaptive beliefs predicted psychological distress, which strongly influenced all health outcomes. Self-ratings of rape memory characteristics contributed little to predicting postrape distress. The model accounted for 56% of the variance in general distress, including 91% of psychological symptom severity; 54% of PTSD symptoms; 65% of social maladjustment; and 17% of physical symptoms. Longitudinal replication is planned. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved)

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