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Sexual Victimization and Health-Risk Behaviors: A Prospective Analysis of College Women
Christine A. Gidycz*,
Lindsay M. Orchowski,
Carrie R. King,
and
Cindy L. Rich
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: gidycz{at}ohio.edu.
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Abstract |
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The present study utilizes the National College Health Risk Behavior Survey to examine the relationship between health-risk behaviors and sexual victimization among a sample of college women. A prospective design is utilized to examine the relationship between health-risk behaviors as measured at baseline and sexual victimization during a 3-month follow-up period. After controlling for age and parents education, a history of adolescent sexual victimization was associated with the following health-risk behaviors as measured at pretest: increased likelihood of cigarette smoking, marijuana use, suicidal ideation, experience of physical violence within a dating relationship, use of diet pills and vomiting or laxatives to lose weight, multiple sexual partners, and early sexual intercourse. Prospectively, womens history of adolescent sexual victimization was the strongest predictor of sexual victimization during the 3-month follow-up. Implications of univariate associations between early sexual intercourse, suicidal ideation, and problematic weight loss behaviors and subsequent experience of sexual victimization are discussed.
First published on February 13, 2008, doi:10.1177/0886260507313944
Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2008;23:744.
A more recent version of this article appeared on June 1, 2008

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