Abstract

BackgroundUnderage drinking is widespread, but studies on alcohol-related sexual victimization among teenage girls are almost non-existent. Research on individual correlates and risk factors of sexual victimization more generally is also meager. This study focuses on sexual assault while incapacitated due to drunkenness among 15–18 year-old girls and examines how age, drinking behavior, impulsivity and involvement in norm-violating activities are associated with such victimization experiences.MethodsData stemmed from a school survey (response rate: 85%) in 16 Norwegian municipalities. Almost all analyses were restricted to girls who had been intoxicated in the past year (n = 2701). In addition to bivariate associations, adjusted odds ratios and relative risks of incapacitated sexual assault (ISA) were estimated. Further, population-attributable fractions were calculated to explore how the prevalence of ISA victimization was likely to be affected if effective preventive measures were targeted solely at high-risk groups.ResultsThe majority of the girls (71%) had been intoxicated in the past year, of which 7% had experienced ISA victimization in the same period. The proportion of victims decreased by age within the group that had been intoxicated, reflecting that the youngest girls were more likely to get severely drunk. Impulsivity and involvement in norm-violating behaviors were identified as potential risk factors, but the population-attributable fractions indicated that the groups with the highest risk of ISA victimization accounted for only a minority of all the cases of such victimization.ConclusionSexual assault against teenage girls who are too drunk to resist seems to be prevalent in Norway – notably among the youngest girls who engage in heavy episodic drinking. This study also suggests that one should reconsider the notion that no individual attributes are related to females’ sexual assault victimization. It also indicates that a high risk approach to prevention, targeting groups with a high level of impulsivity or behavioral problems, may have limited effect on the prevalence of ISA victimization. Thus, from a public health perspective, it may be advisable to give priority to universal preventive measures to curb young girls’ risk of being sexually assaulted in a state of alcohol-induced incapacitation.

Highlights

  • IntroductionBut studies on alcohol-related sexual victimization among teenage girls are almost non-existent

  • Underage drinking is widespread, but studies on alcohol-related sexual victimization among teenage girls are almost non-existent

  • incapacitated sexual assault (ISA) victimization during the past 12 months was reported by 5.3% of all the girls and 7.4% of the girls who had been intoxicated in the same period

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Summary

Introduction

But studies on alcohol-related sexual victimization among teenage girls are almost non-existent. Underage drinking is prevalent in Europe and NorthAmerica [1,2], but studies on alcohol-related sexual assault victimization among teenage girls are almost non-existent. It has been shown that the risk of sexual victimization is higher on drinking days as compared to non-drinking days [7,8], and increases with the level of blood alcohol concentration [9]. In part, this probably reflects that alcohol may impair the ability to acknowledge potential danger and to effectively fend off unwanted sexual advances. The risk of ISA seems to be elevated among the youngest college women [11,12,13] but it has not been reported whether this may reflect age-related changes in lifestyle and drinking behavior

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