Silent screams: Listening to and making meaning from the voices of abused children

被引:5
|
作者
Iorfa, Steven Kator [1 ,2 ]
Effiong, James Edem [3 ]
Apejoye, Alice [4 ]
Johri, Tanya [5 ]
Isaiah, Uwemedimo Sunday [3 ]
Eche, Grace Oyikowo [2 ]
Ottu, Iboro F. A. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Portsmouth, Dept Accounting & Financial Management, Portsmouth, Hants, England
[2] Univ Nigeria, Dept Psychol, Nsukka, Nigeria
[3] Univ Uyo, Dept Psychol, Uyo, Nigeria
[4] Univ Nigeria, Dept Social Work, Nsukka, Nigeria
[5] Gurugram Univ, Dept Psychol, Gurugram, India
关键词
child sexual violence; physicians; stigma; therapeutic listening; trauma; ADOLESCENT SEXUAL-ABUSE; CHILDHOOD; PSYCHOLOGY; NIGERIA;
D O I
10.1111/cch.12975
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
Background Sexual violence against children is a major clinical, public health and human rights concern globally. Specifically, child sexual violence (CSV) is one of the world's leading causes of trauma in children. In extreme cases, victims of CSV grow up with a plethora of maladaptive behaviours, which may be salient in the course of growth but later present in adulthood as severe cases of comorbid psychopathologies. It is expected therefore that CSV cases be treated with urgency and policies/laws against perpetrators be translated into visible outcomes. However, many CSV cases go unreported; and where there are attempts at reporting, the manner and approach of handling these cases is discouraging and futile. In this study, we explored the lived experiences of CSV survivors in Nigeria who tried reporting and opening up their experiences. Method Using the hermeneutic phenomenological approach, responses from 11 girls aged 15 to 17 years at the time of the study and 8 to 16 years at onset of abuse were obtained. Data were gathered through interviews, and the victims' experiences were aggregated using content analysis. Results The major findings were summarized under the following themes: (a) silent screams, (b) trauma and the search for a therapeutic ear, (c) stigma and (d) withdrawal: our last resort. Respondents reported crying out and begging perpetrators to stop the act. They also reported experiencing trauma and related physical/mental health issues after the act. As they sought whom to disclose to, they reported feeling stigmatized and eventually having to withdraw and recoil. Conclusions Implications of the study cut across medical practice, social work, therapeutics and policy formation/implementation for the prevention of CSV and attending to CSV victims in hospitals, homes and schools. The importance of empathic therapeutic processes was discussed. The need for a multisectoral and multistakeholder approach in tackling CSV was also highlighted.
引用
收藏
页码:702 / 707
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Safeguarding Children's Well-Being: Voices From Abused Mothers Navigating Their Relationships and the Civil Courts
    Miller, Susan L.
    Manzer, Jamie L.
    JOURNAL OF INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE, 2021, 36 (9-10) : 4545 - 4569
  • [42] Reunifying abused or neglected children: Decision-making and outcomes
    Biehal, Nina
    Sinclair, Ian
    Wade, Jim
    CHILD ABUSE & NEGLECT, 2015, 49 : 107 - 118
  • [43] Making silent voices heard: Using participatory video to address sexual violence
    Mahadev, Rekha
    AGENDA-EMPOWERING WOMEN FOR GENDER EQUITY, 2015, 29 (03): : 13 - 21
  • [44] pedagogical immediacy, listening, and silent meaning: essayistic exercises in philosophy and literature for early childhood educators
    Johansson, Viktor Magne
    CHILDHOOD AND PHILOSOPHY, 2022, 18
  • [45] Special issue: Listening to voices from the margins of entrepreneurship
    Smith, Robert
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND INNOVATION, 2007, 8 (04): : 245 - 250
  • [46] Vocational training and beyond - listening to voices from a void
    Bonsor, R
    Gibbs, T
    Woodward, R
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF GENERAL PRACTICE, 1998, 48 (426): : 915 - 918
  • [47] Voices from the Shadows: Listening for the Self in Apocalyptic Times
    Woods, Medora
    PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES-A QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF JUNGIAN THOUGHT, 2012, 55 (04): : 416 - 446
  • [49] To Feel Belonged: The Voices of Children and Youth with Disabilities on the Meaning of Wellbeing
    K.-R. Foley
    A. M. Blackmore
    S. Girdler
    M. O’Donnell
    R. Glauert
    G. Llewellyn
    H. Leonard
    Child Indicators Research, 2012, 5 : 375 - 391
  • [50] To Feel Belonged: The Voices of Children and Youth with Disabilities on the Meaning of Wellbeing
    Foley, K. -R.
    Blackmore, A. M.
    Girdler, S.
    O'Donnell, M.
    Glauert, R.
    Llewellyn, G.
    Leonard, H.
    CHILD INDICATORS RESEARCH, 2012, 5 (02) : 375 - 391