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Differences Between Adult Male & Female
Victims of Childhood Sexual Abuse
By Peter Dimock, L.C.S.W.
August, 1989
Males are
sexually abused less often than females.
Males are
sexually abused more often by other males; however more recent studies indicate increased
reporting of abuse by females.
Males are more
often abused by someone outside the family who is known to them and who is frequently
younger than abusers of females (baby-sitters, parental friend, extended relative, etc.).
Males are less
likely to report the abuse.
Males are less
likely to identify the abuse as abuse or as harmful to them. Males generally report
experiencing the abuse more positively than females especially if perpetrated by a female.
A male may
question his sexual identity and sexual preference more frequently.
Males are more
likely to act out the sexual abuse aggressively, and report more frequently than females a
desire to hurt others.
Males are more
likely to view themselves and be viewed by others as responsible for the abuse.
Males are less
likely to seek assistance for the sexual abuse; however, male sexual abuse victims are
more likely than males who have not been abused to have sought psychological help for
other problems.
Males are more
likely than females to have sexual fantasies about children and desires to engage in
sexual activities with a child.
Males
experience more general psychological, physical, and behavioral symptoms than females who
tend to be more depressed.
- Males have been shown in studies be more
vulnerable to physiological and psychological dysfunction than females in stressful
situations such as family discord, bereavement, divorce, etc. A logical extension of this
would support the hypothesis that they may be more effected by sexual abuse than females
yet less likely to acknowledge the abuse or seek help.
©1989 Peter Dimock
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