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Vol. 24. Num. 1. - 2015. Pages 49-62

Psychological injury in victims of child sexual abuse: A meta-analytic review

[Daño psicológico en víctimas de abuso sexual infantil: Una revisión meta-analítica]

Bárbara G. Amado1 , Ramón Arce Fernández1 , Andrés Herraiz1


1Univ. Santiago de Compostela, Dep. Psicología Organizacional, Jurídico-Forense y Metodología, España


https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psi.2015.03.002

Abstract

In order to assess the effects of child/adolescent sexual abuse (CSA/ASA) on the victim's probability of developing symptoms of depression and anxiety, to quantify injury in populational terms, to establish the probability of injury, and to determine the different effects of moderators on the severity of injury, a meta-analysis was performed. Given the abundant literature, only studies indexed in the scientific database of reference, the Web of Science, were selected. A total of 78 studies met the inclusion criteria: they measured CSA/ASA victimization or injury in terms of depression or anxiety symptoms, measured the effect size or included data for computing them, and provided a description of the sample. The results showed that CSA/ASA victims suffered significant injury, generally of a medium effect size and generalizable, victim shad 70% more probabilities of suffering from injury, and clinical diagnosis was significantly a more adequate measure of injury than symptoms. The probability of chronic injury (dysthymia) was greater than developing more severe injury, i.e., major depressive disorder (MDD). In the category of anxiety disorders, injury was expressed with a higher probability in specific phobia. In terms of the victim's gender, females had significantly higher rates of developing a depressive disorder (DD) and/or an anxiety disorder(AD), quantified in a 42% and 24% over the baseline, for a DD and AD respectively. As for the type of abuse, the meta-analysis revealed that abuse involving penetration was linked to severe injury, whereas abuse with no contact was associated to less serious injury. The clinical, social, and legal implications of the results are discussed. 

Resumen

Con el objetivo de conocer los potenciales efectos de la victimización de abuso sexual infantil/adolescente(ASI/ASA) en el desarrollo de sintomatología depresiva y ansiosa así como cuantificar, en su caso, elpotencial daño en términos poblacionales, la probabilidad de manifestación de daño y el efecto diferencialde moderadores en la severidad del daño manifestado, se planificó una revisión meta-analítica. Dada lagran proliferación de literatura se seleccionaron aquellos estudios indexados en la base de datos dereferencia de calidad científica, la Web of Science. Setenta y ocho estudios cumplieron los criterios deinclusión: medida de la victimización de ASI/ASA, medida del daño en sintomatología depresiva o ansiosa,medida del tamaño del efecto o inclusión de datos que permitieran computarlo y descripción de lamuestra. Los resultados mostraron que la victimización de ASI/ASA conlleva un daño significativo de untamaño en general moderado y generalizable, que las víctimas tienen un 70% más de probabilidades depresentar daño y que el diagnóstico clínico es una medida significativamente más adecuada del daño quela sintomatología. La probabilidad de cronificación del daño (distimia) es mayor que la de un daño másgrave (depresión mayor). En la categoría de los trastornos de ansiedad, el daño se manifiesta con mayorprobabilidad en fobia específica. En cuanto al género de la víctima, las mujeres presentan una tasasignificativamente mayor de desarrollo de un cuadro depresivo, cuantificado en un 42% sobre la líneabase, y ansioso, cuantificado en un 24%. Por el tipo de abuso, los meta-análisis evidencian que el abuso conpenetración conlleva más daño y el abuso sin contacto un daño menor. Se discuten las implicacionesclínicas, sociales y legales de los resultados. 

Keywords

Child sexual abuse
Adolescent sexual abuse
Psychological injury
Victimization
Meta-analysis

Palabras clave

Abuso sexual infantil
Abuso sexual adolescente
Daño psicológico
Victimización
Meta-análisis

The World Health Organization (WHO, 1999) defines child sexual abuse (CSA) as involvement of a child in sexual activity that he or she does not fully comprehend, is unable to give informed consent to, or for which the child is not developmentally prepared and cannot give consent, or that violates the laws or social taboos of society. This definition encompasses the universal criterion, the involvement of a child in sexual behaviours/activities that the child is neither physically nor mentally prepared, and who lacks the capacity to consent, as well as the legal standards specific to each country (Stoltenborgh, van Ijzendoorn, Euser, & Bakermans-Kranenburg, 2011). These authors often refer to the characteristics of the aggressor (e.g., age, family relationship) and define the typologies of abuse (e.g., contact, exhibitionism). In the scientific literature, the term child sexual abuse includes adolescent sexual abuse (ASA) ( Rich, Gidycz, Warkentin, Loh, & Weiland, 2005; Schoedl et al., 2010 ).

A recent meta-analysis established the global prevalence of CSA/ ASA at 11.8% ( Stoltenborgh et al., 2011 ). Additionally, both epidemiological studies (WHO, 2014) and several meta-analysis ( Pereda, Guilera, Forns, & Gómez-Benito, 2009; Stoltenborgh et al., 2011 ) have coincided in that females had CSA/ASA rates around 18% to 20% higher than the 8% prevalence rate for males.

Of the different forms of child abuse, CSA/ASA is linked to severe injury ( Intebi, 1998 ). In fact, numerous empirical studies have established a relationship between CSA/ASA and psychological injury (e.g., major depressive disorder, dysthymia, generalized anxiety disorder, phobic disorders), which may become manifest in the short-term and/or become chronic ( Jumper, 1995 ; Paolucci, Genuis, & Violato, 2001). Psychological injury is classified according to two broad diagnostic categories: mood disorders and depressive disorders (as termed by the DSM-IV and DSM-V, respectively), and anxiety disorders ( Jumper, 1995; Maniglio, 2009; Paolucci et al., 2001 ). The manifestation of sequelae in symptoms or in a particular disorder was related to the variables specific to each individual.

The high CSA/ASA prevalence rates, the association between victims and mental injury, the severity and chronicity of injury, the variability in prevalence, severity, and chronicity of injury, and the contradictory results underscored the need for undertaking a meta-analysis to review the empirical data on psychological injury in CSA/ASA victims in terms of symptoms and anxiety and depressive disorders.

Though injury associated to CSA/ASA victims is assumed to be general, certain moderators are expected to explain differences in the degree of injury. Succinctly, the prevalence and severity of injury has been reported to be different for females and for males ( Jonas et al., 2011; Koenen & Widom, 2009; Stoltenborgh et al., 2011; Tolin & Foa, 2006 ; WHO, 2000, 2014); the type of sexual abuse suffered (i.e., contact, no contact, intercourse) (Bulik, Prescott, & Kendler, 2001; Cutajar et al., 2010; Fergusson, McLeod, & Hordwood, 2013; Jonas et al., 2011 ); the type of measure of psychological injury, symptoms (psychometric measure), and diagnosis of the disorders (clinical diagnosis) ( Maniglio, 2010 ; Peleikis, Mykletum, & Dahl, 2005; Vilariño, Arce, & Fariña, 2013); and cultural aspects related to the manifestation of symptoms, and anxiety and depressive disorders ( American Psychiatric Association, 2013 ).

Owing to the clinical, social, and legal implications of the results, the meta-analytical technique to be employed should not be constrained to standard effect sizes with their significance, generalization, and assessment of moderators, but should also quantify injury in terms of populations (i.e., assessing injury rates above the baseline) and evaluate the probability of manifesting injury and the dif-ferential effects of moderators on the severity of injury.

Method Database Search of Studies

The process for selecting scientific studies began with a search in the meta-search engines (i.e., Google, Yahoo, Google Scholar), which, according to the descriptors, listed between approximately 36,000 to 770,000 results. The vast majority of the search results yielded, with-out compromising the requirements for performing a robust meta-analysis (i.e., sufficient k and N ), a selection of studies par excellence. Thus, the next step was to search for studies in one of the world's leading scientific databases of reference, the Web of Science. All of the databases of scientific papers (Core Collection, Current Contents, Medline, Scielo, KCI-Korean) were searched to include not only scientific literature par excellence, but also cultural concepts (i.e., Latinos, Asiatic), which are referred to in the manuals for the classification of mental disorders (DSM and ICD) and may have differential effects on the symptoms associated to victims of sexual abuse, i.e., depressive and anxiety disorders. Nevertheless, the race or ethnicity of victims of sexual abuse was not related in itself to the manifestation of depressive or anxiety disorders ( Mennen, 1995).

In the initial search for studies in the meta-search engines, both English and Spanish descriptors were used: child maltreatment/maltrato infantil, child sexual abuse/abuso sexual infantil, victimization/ victimización, internalizing disorders/trastornos internalizantes, anxiety/ansiedad, and depression/depresión. In the second search in the Web of Science, the same English language descriptors were used given that all of the descriptors in these databases are in English. Following a method of successive approximations, all of the keywords were reviewed in the selected articles in the search for other potential descriptors. This method identified other descriptors employed by other authors (e.g., child sexual abuse, adolescent sexual abuse, internalizing behaviour disorder, CSA survivors, and sequelae) that were included in the search. In all, the system yielded more than 15,900 (searching by child sexual abuse) and 2,000 (searching by child sexual abuse AND depression OR anxiety) studies that were finally reduced to 78 after applying the following inclusion and exclusion criteria.

Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria

Of the studies listed by the system, the following met the inclusion criteria: a) studies assessing the sequelae of CSA/ASA [CSA/ASA understood as the involvement of a child in sexual activity that he or she does not fully comprehend, is unable to give informed consent to, or for which the child is not developmentally prepared and cannot give consent] in terms of depression or anxiety internalizing variables; b) studies reporting the effect sizes of CSA/ASA sequelae, in which the variables and/or statistics enabled the following to be calculated: group size, mean and standard deviation of sequelae measurement variables for each group, prevalence, specificity, and sensitivity; c) studies defining the ground truth for classifying participants as victims of CSA/ASA or the measure (i.e., instrument) of abuse; and d) studies providing descriptive data on the sample employed (e.g., age, sample size).

Studies failing to meet the prescribed requirements were excluded, as were cases where, after contacting the authors, the data required was not facilitated for the computation of the effect sizes. In addition, studies with data errors (e.g., lack of consistency in group size throughout the study not attributable to missing data) were eliminated. Similarly, studies failing to guarantee the mutual exclusion of the victim of sexual abuse condition from other forms of maltreatment were also excluded (e.g., studies undertaking a single comprehensive analysis of victims of sexual and physical abuse or neglect). The inclusion of studies was restricted in time to studies published since 1995 given the profusion of meta-analysis on studies up to 1995 ( Jumper, 1995 ). Thus, by applying these criteria, 78 studies were selected, with a total of 19,360 subjects, from which 149 effect sizes were obtained: 62 for the effects of CSA/ASA on anxiety disorders and 87 for depressive disorders. All of the studies selected had been published in double blind peer-reviewed scientific journals indexed at the Web of Science.

Coding of Primary Studies

The following data from the studies was coded for the meta-analysis: variables measuring the effects of abuse (i.e., clinical diagnosis, clinical symptoms), measures of abuse, reliability of the measurement instruments, sample characteristics (i.e., size, age, cultural context), and the statistics required for computing the effect sizes.

All of the studies of the sample were examined by two independent researchers, with total agreement in their classifications ( k = 1). Appendix 1 shows the characteristics of the primary studies included in the present meta-analysis.

Data Analysis

The weighted effect size was calculated according to the sample size of the variable measuring the effects of CSA/ASA (anxiety or depression). When several measures of anxiety were reported (e.g., generalized, social phobia, specific phobia) or depression (e.g., major depression, dysthymia), the means for the effect sizes of the variables with more than one measure were calculated. Moreover, when the sample was subdivided into subtypes of abuse, the effect sizes were weighted in order to obtain an overall size.

The meta-analytical technique employed was a correlational type procedure ( Hunter & Schmidt, 2004 ), weighting the effect size with the sample size and correcting with the reliability of the predictor and the criterion.

As most of studies fail to provide correlations between sexual abuse and the measures of sequelae of internalizing disorders (i.e., anxiety and depression), an alternative estimator of effect size, i.e., Cohen's d (1988), was computed when studies reported the mean and standard deviations of the experimental group (abused children), but no control group (in these studies the control group taken was the normative population for each instrument). When the results were expressed as student t values (F for one degree of freedom was transformed into t values), Cohen's d was obtained by comparing groups of the same sizes or when homogeneity of variance was observed and Hedges’ g (Hedges & Olkin, 1985 ) were obtained for different sizes or no homogeneity of variance. If the results were expressed in Z values, they were transformed into correlations, phi was obtained from 2 x 2 tables, and when in odds ratio converted to correlations. The formulas for converting the other effect sizes to correlations were taken from Cohen (1988) and Rosenthal (1994).

To estimate the practical utility of the results, the U1 ( Cohen, 1988 ), the odds ratio, and the CLES ( McGraw & Wong, 1992 ) were calculated. Additionally, increases in CSA/ASA symptoms or disorders (injury quantified in relation to population baselines) were directly obtained from r.

Predictor Reliability

For predictor reliability, the measure of sexual abuse, the reliability coefficients obtained from the primary studies were computed. When studies failed to report reliability coefficients or reported concordance, which is not reliability, mean reliability was calculated on the basis of the primary studies. Table 1 shows mean reliability, the standard error, and a 95% confidence interval (indicating the variance of mean reliability) for each context measured. Succinctly, the measure of the predictor, victims of sexual abuse, was reliable (see Table 1 ) with a limit below .77 (that is, high reliability, r > .70; Arce, Velasco, Novo, & Farina, 2014; Nunnally & Bernstein, 1994 ).

Table 1

Predictor Reliability.

Measure  r xx  SEM rxx  95% CI  n 
Sexual abuse victimization  .82  .023  .77, .86  17 

Note. rxx = average measure reliability; SEM rxx = mean standard error; 95% CI = 95% confidence interval; n = number of reliability coefficients.

Criterion Reliability

Criterion reliability was drawn from the primary studies, the ori-ginal publication of the instrument itself and, in the absence of both, completed with the means for those contingencies where they were unavailable. The mean reliability, standard error, and confidence intervals for each measure are shown in Table 2 . In short, the measure of criteria reliability ranged from .84 to .86, with a lower limit for a 95% confidence interval of .82. Thus, the measures of the criterion were highly reliable ( r > .70).

Table 2

Criterion Reliability.

Criteria  ryy  SEMryy  95% CI 
Anxiety  .84  .010  .82, .86  41 
Depression  .86  .008  .84, .88  57 
Total  .86  .006  .85, .87  61 

Note. ryy = average measure reliability; SEM ryy = mean standard error; 95% CI = 95% confidence interval; n = number of reliability coefficients.

Results Study of Outliers

Outliers in each of the measures (general sequelae, depression, and anxiety) were removed using the criterion ± 2 SD (bilateral) of the mean effect size, so the results were generalizable to 96% of future samples. The results identified 6 outliers (-.12 > r >.64) in sequelae (M = .26, SD = .19), 5 outliers (-.13 > r > .63) in anxiety (M = .25, SD = .19), and 6 outliers (-.14 > r > .66) in depression (M = .26, SD =.20). Thus, a total of 6 studies were eliminated from the meta-analysis as outliers.

Global analysis

The results of the meta-analysis on sequelae of sexual abuse on mental health (internalizing symptoms: depression and anxiety) showed (see Table 3 ) a significant effect (when the confidence interval has no zero, indicating the effect size was significant), positive (between victimization and mental health injury), generalizable (when the credibility interval has no zero, indicating the effect size was generalizable to 90% of other samples), and of a medium size (Cohen's category: r = .30) in general sequelae, depression, and anxiety, explaining 12, 8, and 10% of the variance respectively. In terms of practical utility, victims of CSA/ASA had a 70% higher probability (CLES) of internalizing injury (general sequelae) than non-victims, with 66% for depression and 68% for anxiety. The injury caused was quantified as 34, 28, and 31% in general sequelae, depression, and anxiety, respectively. Finally, the distributions for victims and non-victims (U1) in general sequelae, depression, and anxiety were totally independent (44, 37, and 41% respectively), though they were expected to be similar.

Table 3

Results of the Meta-Analyses of Sexual Abuse Victimization in General Sequelae, Depression, and Anxiety.

  N E  N C  N T  r w  SD r  ρ  SD ρ  %VE  95% CIr  90% CIρ 
General Sequelae  91  19360  93988  125555  .28  .17  .34  .20  2.82  [.27, .29]  [.08, .59] 
Depression  87  18910  92618  123735  .24  .14  .28  .16  4.10  [.23, .25]  [.08, .49] 
Anxiety  62  14587  77494  93075  .26  .14  .31  .17  3.73  [.25, .27]  [.10, .52] 

Note. k = number of studies; N E = experimental group sample size; NC = control group sample size; NT = total sample size; r w = observed correlation (observed validity) weighted for sample size; SD r = standard deviation of the observed correlation; ρ = true correlation (operational validity corrected for criterion and predictor unreliability); SD ρ = standard deviation of true correlation; %VE = percentage of variance accounted for by artifactual errors; 95% CI r = 95% confidence interval; 90% CI ρ = 90% credibility interval. When N TN E + N C , it means that experimental or control group sample size in primary studies were unknown.

As for the robustness of the significance of the sequelae in CSA/ ASA victims, it is worth noting that 93 studies with no significant results would be required to accept the null hypothesis.

Though results were generalizable in three measures (general sequelae, depression, and anxiety), the literature recommends assessing the potential differential effects of gender, type of measure, and type of abuse (meta-analysis). In short, it is well known that the base rate for symptoms and clinical diagnosis differ from males to females

(Nolen-Hoeksema, 1990, 2002 ). This view is so firmly established that most of the psychometric measurement instruments extensively used in clinical practice score males separately to females. Likewise, according to the leading international organisations classifying mental disorders ( American Psychiatric Association, 2013 ; WHO, 2000), there is a higher prevalence of diagnosed depression and anxiety among females than males, including school-aged children and adolescents. Similarly, the type of abuse suffered (i.e., non-contact, contact, intercourse) has been shown to have effects on sequelae, which relates the severity of the crime to the severity of the injury (mild, moderate, severe) ( Bulik et al., 2001 ; Cutajar et al., 2010; Fergusson et al., 2013; Jonas et al., 2011 ). As for the variables measuring the effects on victims of abuse, i.e., clinical diagnosis and clinical symptoms, the presence of symptoms does not imply that the diagnostic criteria had been met. In other words, they are different measures, given that they measure different constructs, so they may have a differential sensitivity to injury.

Study of Moderators

Gender effects . The results of the meta-analysis showed (see Table 4) a significant effect, positive, of a small size (Cohen's category: r = .10), and generalizable in depression and anxiety in female CSA/ ASA victims.

In comparison, the meta-analysis revealed for male CSA/ASA victims a significant effect, positive, and of a small size in depression and anxiety, being generalizable in depression, but not so in anxiety (see Table 4 ). Thus, in the latter case, the results exhibited moderators mediated the direction of the effects.

Table 4

Results of the Meta-Analyses of Sexual Abuse Victimization in Depression and Anxiety by Gender.

N E  N C  N T  r w  SD r  ρ  SD ρ  %VE  95% CIr  90% CIρ   
Depression measu  re                     
Females  42  8074  20127  39498  .18  .09  .22  .09  14.56  [.17, .19]  [.10, .34] 
Males  12  1830  13843  15673  .11  .08  .13  .10  10.60  [.09, .13]  [.01, .26] 
Anxiety measure                       
Females  27  4926  12542  17706  .18  .12  .22  .13  10.82  [.17, .19]  [.05, .39] 
Males  998  7380  8378  .12  .13  .15  .15  5.56  [.09, .14]  [-.04, .35] 

Note. k = number of studies; N E = experimental group sample size; N C = control group sample size; N T = total sample size; r w = observed correlation (observed validity) weighted for sample size; SD r = standard deviation of the observed correlation; ρ = true correlation (operational validity corrected for criterion and predictor unreliability); SD ρ = standard deviation of true correlation; %VE = percentage of variance accounted for by artifactual errors; 95% CI r = 95% confidence interval; 90% CI ρ = 90% credibility interval. When N T ≠ NE + N C, it means that experimental or control group sample size in primary studies were unknown.

Having contrasted the significance of the differences between the effect sizes, the true correlation between female participants and male participants, sequelae in depression was found to be significantly higher, q s = 0.093, p < .05, in females, but not so for anxiety, q s = 0.073, ns . This translates into quantifying injury in females as suffering from 9% more injury in depression than males. In prevalence rates (odds ratio), injury in depression for female and male victims was 2.26 and 1.60 times greater than for non-victims, and 2.26 and 1.73 times greater in anxiety for female and male victims, respectively, in contrast to non-victims.

Effects of the type of measure . The results of the meta-analysis showed a significant effect, positive, of a medium size, and generalizable in the diagnosis of depressive and anxiety disorders in victims of CSA/ASA (see Table 5).

Table 5

Results of the Meta-Analyses of Sexual Abuse Victimization in Depression and Anxiety by Type of Measure.

  N N N r SDr  ρ  SD ρ  %VE  95% CIr  90% CIρ 
Depressive Disorder  28  12131  66986  90220  .26  .14  .31  .03  2.32  [.25, .27]  [.10, .52] 
Dysthymia  4524  36668  41192  .38  .08  .46  .09  8.91  [.37, .39]  [.34, .56] 
Major Depressive Disorder  24  9406  64284  84793  .26  .14  .31  .16  2.21  [.25, .27]  [.11, .52] 
Depressive symptomatology  59  6668  25533  33293  .18  .12  .21  .13  12.75  [.17, .19]  [.04, .37] 
Anxiety Disorder  21  10133  58784  68917  .29  .14  .35  .16  2.40  [.28, .30]  [.14, .56] 
Generalized Anxiety Disorder  5808  43403  49211  .34  .11  .41  .13  3.63  [.33, .35]  [.25, .57] 
Specific Phobia  3830  30616  34446  .41  .03  .49  .02  70.97  [.40, .42]  [.46, .51] 
Social Phobia  10  4901  39701  44602  .34  .13  .40  .15  2.82  [.33, .35]  [.21, .60] 
Panic Disorder  4932  37321  42253  .36  .11  .43  .12  4.30  [.35, .37]  [.27, .58] 
Anxiety symptomatology  41  4510  18845  24270  .18  .12  .21  .13  12.53  [.17, .19]  [.05, .37] 

Note. k = number of studies; NE = experimental group sample size; NC = control group sample size; NT = total sample size; rw = observed correlation (observed validity) weighted for sample size; SD r = standard deviation of the observed correlation; ρ = true correlation (operational validity corrected for criterion and predictor unreliability); SD ρ = standard deviation of true correlation; %VE = percentage of variance accounted for by artifactual errors; 95% CI r = 95% confidence interval; 90% CIρ = 90% credibility interval. When N TN E + N C , it means that experimental or control group sample size in primary studies were unknown. Effect size for agoraphobia has not been obtained due to insufficient k.

Likewise, the results of the meta-analysis displayed a significant effect, positive, of a small effect size and generalizable in anxiety and depression symptoms in CSA/ASA victims (see Table 5).

Comparatively, injury was significantly higher, q s = 0.152, p < .01, in the clinical diagnosis of anxiety disorder than reported symptoms of anxiety. Likewise, the diagnosis of a depressive disorder was significantly more sensitive, q s = 0.108, p < .05, for CSA/ASA victims than the report of depressive symptoms. These results, due to the type of measure, explained the differences attributed to sample type ( Rind, Bauserman, & Tromovitch, 1998 ): university population (measure of symptoms) and clinical population (clinical diagnosis).

The meta-analysis of major depressive disorder and dysthymia (persistent depressive disorder) nesting in the diagnosis of depression (see Table 5 ), confirmed a significant and positive effect, of a medium size, and generalizable. Thus, the prevalence of a dysthymic disorder in victims of abuse was 6.59 (odds ratio) times higher than for non-victims, 3.25 higher for major depression. In terms of injury quantification, it was of 46% for dysthymia and 31% for major depression. The difference between effect sizes was significant, q s = 0.176, p < .01, thus the effect size for the diagnosis of dysthymia was significantly larger than for major depressive disorder.

Similarly, the meta-analysis on generalized anxiety disorder, specific phobia, social phobia, and panic disorder were nested in anxiety disorders (see Table 5 ) found a significant and positive effect, of a medium to large, and generalizable for every diagnosis. Indeed, this implied CSA/ASA victims had 5.12, 7.62, 4.85, and 5.60 (odds ratio) greater probability of developing generalized anxiety disorder, specific phobia, social phobia, and panic disorder, respectively, than CSA/ASA non-victims. Injury was quantified as 41, 49, 40, and 43% for generalized anxiety disorder, specific phobia, social phobia, and panic disorder, respectively. The probability of developing these disorders as sequelae was similar except for specific phobia that was significantly higher than social phobia, q s = 0.112, p < .05, and generalized anxiety disorder, q s = 0.100, p < .05.

Effects of the type of abuse . The results of the meta-analysis on the type of abuse suffered (no contact, contact, and penetration) revealed a significant and positive effect, of small size, and generalizable in depression and anxiety (see Table 6 ). The comparison of sizes, showed injury derived from abuse with penetration, both in depression and anxiety, was significantly higher than injury in the no contact abuse condition for depression, q s = 0.093, p < .05, and anxiety, qs = 0.092, p < .05.

Table 6

Results of the Meta-analyses of Sexual Abuse Victimization in Depression and Anxiety by Type of Abuse.

  N E  N C  N T  rw  SD r  ρ  SD ρ  %VE  95% CIr  90% CIρ 
Depression Measure                       
Non-Contact  278  5431  5709  .12  .03  .14  100  [.09, .15]  [.14] 
Contact  171  3228  3399  .16  .07  .18  .07  25.97  [.13, .19]  [.10, .27] 
Intercourse  184  3228  3412  .19  .08  .23  .09  17.60  [.16, .22]  [.11, .34] 
Anxiety Measure                       
Non-Contact  101  3225  3326  .08  .03  .09  100  [.05, .11]  [.09] 
Contact  170  3225  3395  .11  .06  .14  .06  34.73  [.08, .14]  [.06, .21] 
Intercourse  184  3225  3409  .15  .07  .18  .08  22.02  [.12, .18]  [.08, .28] 

Note. k = number of studies; N E = experimental group sample size; N C = control group sample size; NT = total sample size; rw = observed correlation (observed validity) weighted for sample size; SD r = standard deviation of the observed correlation; ρ = true correlation (operational validity corrected for criterion and predictor unreliability); SD ρ = standard deviation of true correlation; %VE = percentage of variance accounted for by artifactual errors; 95% CI r = 95% confidence interval; 90% CI ρ = 90% credibility interval. When N TN E + N C, it means that experimental or control group sample size in primary studies were unknown.

Effects of the interaction type of measure and gender . In the diagnosis of depressive disorders (see Table 7 ), the effect sizes were positive and significant for both males and females, of a small size for males and a medium one for females, which were generalizable for females, but not for males (the effects of the moderators could not be assessed in this case due to the very small k ). In comparison, the effect size for females was significantly higher, q s = 0.388, p < .01, than for males, quantifying injury in 42% for female victims and 10% for males. As for prevalence, female CSA/ASA victims had a 5.40 (odds ratio) more probability of meeting the criteria of depressive disorders than female non-victims, whereas males had a 1.44 more probability than male non-victims. Moreover, for the diagnosis of anxiety disorders the effect sizes were positive, significant, and of a small size for both males and females, generalizable for females, but not so for males (once again, moderators could not be found due to the very small k ). Once again, the effect size found in females was significantly higher, q s = 0.104, p < .05, than in males, with injury of 24% for female victims and 14% for males. This reveals that female victims had 2.43 (odds ratio) more probability of developing anxiety disorders than female non-victims, and male victims 1.66 more probability than male non-victims.

Table 7

Results of the Meta-analyses of the Sexual Abuse Victimization in Depression and Anxiety by Type of Measure and Gender.

  N E  N C  N T  r w  SD r  ρ  SD ρ  %VE  95% CIr  90% CIρ 
Depressive Disorder Diagnosis                       
Females  11  4421  11594  27130  .33  .19  .42  .23  1.79  [.32, .34]  [.13, .71] 
Males  1446  10220  11666  .08  .08  .10  .09  6.90  [.06, .10]  [-.02, .21] 
Anxiety Disorder Diagnosis                       
Females  3192  8018  11210  .20  .13  .24  .15  4.75  [.18, .22]  [.05, .43] 
Males  845  6806  7651  .11  .13  .14  .15  3.26  [.09, .13]  [-.06, .33] 
Depressive Symptomatology                       
Females  32  3709  8530  12482  .17  .09  .20  .09  27.79  [.15, .19]  [.07, .32] 
Males  458  3577  4035  .18  .05  .22  .04  62.72  [.15, .20]  [.17, .26] 
Anxiety Symptomatology                       
Females  20  1790  4580  6608  .15  .09  .18  .09  33.68  [.13, .17]  [.07, .30] 
Males  153  594  727  .23  .09  .27  .05  69.51  [.16, .30]  [.20, .35] 

Note. k = number of studies; N E = experimental group sample size; N C = control group sample size; N T = total sample size; r w = observed correlation (observed validity) weighted for sample size; SD r = standard deviation of the observed correlation; ρ = true correlation (operational validity corrected for criterion and predictor unreliability); SD ρ = standard deviation of true correlation; %VE = percentage of variance accounted for by artifactual errors; 95% CI r = 95% confidence interval; 90% CI ρ = 90% credibility interval. When N TN E + N C , it means that experimental or control group sample size in primary studies were unknown.

The effect sizes in depressive symptoms were significant, positive, of small sizes, generalizable, and similar ( ns ) for both males and females. As for anxiety symptoms, the effect sizes were significant, positive, of small sizes, and generalizable for both males and females. Nonetheless, the effect size was significantly higher, q s = 0.095, p < .05, in males. Thus, the results highlight that male CSA/ASA victims had a 2.76 probability (odds ratio) of developing significantly more anxiety symptoms than male non-victims, and female victims a 1.95 probability than female non-victims.

Discussion

As a whole, the results of this study support undoubtedly (a total of 93 studies with non-significant results would be required to annul the effect) that CSA/ASA victimization had a significant and positive effect (injury) on mental health, of a smallto large-size, and generalizable. This was demonstrated in the following:

a) A higher probability, around 70% in each of the different measures, of suffering from internalized injury, depression, and anxiety.

b) Injury caused to the victim's mental health, that is, mental injury and/or emotional suffering ( United Nations, 1988 ), was calculated to be around 30% (34, 28 and 31% in general sequelae, depression, and anxiety, respectively). This finding implies that offenders are not only criminally responsible for their deeds, but are also liable to civil compensation payments for injuries caused to victims. With this aim in mind, a forensic technique has been developed for quantifying injury in specific cases ( Arce & Fariña, 2009).

c) Injury to mental health in terms of depression and anxiety associated to victims of CSA/ASA was significant in males and females, but with 9% more depression in females, leading to a higher probability of developing a depressive or anxiety disorders in females with injury of 42 and 24%, respectively. In contrast, injury involved significantly more anxiety symptoms in males with 27% injury. However, symptoms are not an optimum indicator of injury.

d) Clinical diagnosis was a measure of injury significantly more adequate than symptoms. The evaluation techniques characteristic to clinical diagnosis and clinical symptoms may explain these differences. In the interview, indeed, injury was linked to cause, whereas in the psychometric measures of CSA/ASA victimization it was not, allowing for other causes. Furthermore, the diagnostic threshold was much stricter than for symptoms, which underscores its greater sensitivity and specificity. Thus, the benchmark for future research should be the diagnosed measure of injury based on an interview task, rather than symptoms based on a psychometric measure.

e) Injury was calculated to be 46 and 31% for persistent depressive disorder (dysthymia) and major depressive disorder, respectively. Moreover, the expression of injury as dysthymia was significantly greater than for major depressive disorder, that is, the probability of chronic injury (dysthymic) was greater than more serious injury (major depressive disorder).

f) Injury to CSA/ASA victims was expressed in anxiety disorders, estimated to be around 40 to 49%, being the highest in specific phobias.

g) Abuse with penetration led to injury in depression and anxiety significantly greater than abuse with no contact. These results lend support to the distinction in the legal classification of both criminal typologies.

Limitations of the study

This meta-analysis entails certain limitations that should be borne in mind when interpreting the data. First, the ground truth of the primary studies for the classification of abuse generally rests on self-reports of a retrospective nature, that relies on individual memory capabilities, and are related to false positives or false alarms ( Amado, Arce, & Fariña, 2015; Schoedl et al., 2010 ). Moreover, victim self-reports of sexual abuse may bias the results towards concealing them (false negatives), in particular for males ( Stoltenborgh et al., 2011 ). Second, primary studies assume that injury to mental health is sequelae to abuse, without appraising other possible causes (cause-effect relationship) ( Jumper, 1995; Vilariño et al., 2013 ). Third, the effect of the variable under analysis in primary studies was not completely isolated as in many studies victims of sexual abuse, physical abuse, neglect, and other categories appear under the same umbrella. Fourth, as some studies had no control group, the normative population was taken as the contrast group, or it was not equivalent to the experimental one with the subsequent potential for distortion in the calculated effect sizes ( Briere, 1992).

Alternatively, the results of the meta-analysis were subject to little variability, that is, Ns > 400 and a large k (Hunter & Schmidt, 2004 ) were highly generalizable (entirely for the female population, and for males with the exception of the diagnosis of a disorder and the general measure of anxiety for the male population), whereas 93 studies with no significant results would be required to annul the evidence supporting the claim that CSA/ASA leads to mental health injuries.

Further research is required to determine which moderators inhibit the generalization of the effects in the general measure of anxiety in the male population and in the diagnosis of depression and anxiety.

Conflict of Interest

The authors of this article declare no conflict of interest.

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