Background: The experience of sexual assault may be associated with numerous adverse outcomes, including depressive disorders and heavy substance use. We aimed to examine the relationship between heavy substance use and depression in victims of sexual assault.

Methods: We used nationally representative data from the German Health and Sexuality Survey (GeSiD) with N = 4,955 women and men aged 18-75 years. We assessed (i) the potential effect of sexual assault experience on depression mediated through hazardous alcohol, heavy tobacco, and frequent cannabis use and (ii) sexual assault experience on heavy substance use mediated through depression using logistic regression analysis to estimate proportion mediated (PM).

Results: We found some evidence of mediation between sexual assault as a lifetime event and depression by heavy tobacco use (PM = 1.6%) and frequent cannabis use (PM = 14.7%) among women. We also observed mediation by hazardous alcohol use (PM = 35.5%) and heavy tobacco use (PM = 48.6%) among men who experienced childhood sexual assault. Focusing on depression as a potential mediator, we found some evidence of mediation between sexual assault as a lifetime event and heavy tobacco use among women (PM = 17.6%) and men (PM = 13.3%), and between sexual assault as a lifetime event and frequent cannabis use (PM = 26.9%) among women.

Conclusions: Our findings suggest that public health specialists, clinicians, and therapists should develop early interventions to prevent addiction and the development of depression after experiencing sexual assault.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-22117-4DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

sexual assault
36
heavy substance
16
heavy tobacco
16
assault experience
12
frequent cannabis
12
assault lifetime
12
lifetime event
12
sexual
10
experience depression
8
heavy
8

Similar Publications

Sexual consent is a foundational aspect of sexual encounters as it distinguishes sexual assault from consensual sex. Despite alcohol-involved sexual assault being a serious public health issue, many college students report engaging in "consensual drunk sex." Thus, understanding how college students determine consent to alcohol-involved sex is essential.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sexual violence (SV) is an insidious social phenomenon that results in physical, emotional, and psychological trauma. The aim of this article is to review the research pertaining to SV in regional, rural, and remote Australia. A systematic scoping review was undertaken using the Arksey and O'Malley five-step framework.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The purpose of this study is to examine workplace violence (WPV) toward primary care physicians (PCPs), including prevalence, associated factors, impacts, and response to WPV in Chengdu, China.

Methods: We used an online cross-sectional design to collect data from October to November 2022 with a structured self-administered questionnaire from a purposive sample of 568 PCPs in Chengdu city.

Results: Among the 490 valid questionnaires, 44.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sexual assault laws in several jurisdictions require jurors to consider whether a defendant "reasonably believed" in consent. Using thematic analysis, we explored how potential jurors ( = 50) make judgments about consent communication and the behaviors that, when informed by the reasonable belief standard, are perceived to communicate (non)consent. Two themes captured the perception that consent is something that is implied, while non-consent is explicit.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Treatment satisfaction and post-treatment factors have not received focus in research on the efficacy of sex offender treatment. We aim to describe factors that are associated with treatment satisfaction and how having satisfaction with sex offender treatment is related to future health and protective factors. We solicited responses via an anonymous self-administered survey from 718 adults in the United States who were required to register on a sex offender registry.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!