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Conceptual model of male military sexual trauma. | LitMetric

Conceptual model of male military sexual trauma.

Psychol Trauma

South Texas Veterans Health Care System, Psychology Service.

Published: August 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Study focuses on male sexual trauma among veterans, highlighting its unique mental health impact.
  • Interviews with 21 male veterans revealed their experiences with military sexual trauma, which included unwanted sexual touching, verbal coercion, and forced sex.
  • Data analysis identified three key areas: types of trauma experienced, negative life effects like trust issues and substance use, and the potential for posttraumatic growth, suggesting a need for tailored clinical treatments.

Article Abstract

Objective: Male sexual trauma is understudied, leaving much to be known about the unique mental health needs of male survivors. This study examined veteran men's perceptions of the effects of military sexual trauma.

Method: Military sexual trauma was defined as physically forced, verbally coerced, or substance-incapacitated acts experienced during military service. Interviews were conducted with 21 male veterans who reported experiencing military sexual trauma. Data were drawn together using a grounded theory methodology.

Results: Three categories emerged from data analysis, including (a) types of military sexual trauma (being touched in a sexual way against their will [N = 18]; sexual remarks directed at them [N = 15]; being physically forced to have sex [N = 13]); (b) negative life effects (difficulty trusting others [N = 18]; fear of abandonment [N = 17]; substance use [N = 13]; fear of interpersonal violence [N = 12]; conduct and vocational problems [N = 11]; irritability/aggression [N = 8]; insecurity about sexual performance [N = 8]; difficulty managing anger [N = 8]); and (c) posttraumatic growth (N = 15).

Conclusions: Results from this study suggest sexual trauma in the military context may affect systems of self-organization, specifically problems in affective, self-concept, and relational domains, similar to symptoms of those who have experienced prolonged traumatic stressors. This model can be used by clinicians to select treatments that specifically target these symptoms and promote posttraumatic growth. (PsycINFO Database Record

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/tra0000194DOI Listing

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