Abstract

BackgroundViolence victimization among youth is recognized as a public health problem. The objective was to analyze the risk pattern of emotional, physical, and sexual abuse during the past 12 months by gender, sociodemographic factors, health risk behaviors, and exposure to abuse before the age of 15, among young men and women attending youth health centers in Sweden.MethodsA cross-sectional survey was conducted using a nationally representative sample of youth health centers. A total of 2,250 young women and 920 young men aged 15–23 completed a self-administered questionnaire. Odds ratios (OR) and adjusted odds ratios (AOR) with 95% CI were calculated.ResultsA consistent and strong association was noted between exposure to all types of violence during the past year and victimization before the age of 15 for all types of violence for both women and men. The only exceptions were childhood sexual victimization and sexual violence during the past year for men. Younger age was associated with all violence exposure for the women and with emotional violence for the men. For the women, drug use was associated with all types of violence, while the association with hazardous alcohol use and not living with parents was restricted to physical and sexual violence exposure, present smoking was restricted to emotional and physical violence exposure, and partnership and living in urban areas were restricted to sexual violence. For men, not being partnered, hazardous alcohol consumption, and drug use meant increased risk for physical violence, while smoking and living in urban areas were associated with sexual violence. After adjustment, immigration had no association with violence exposure.ConclusionsViolence victimization in young men and women is often not a single experience. Findings underline the importance of early interventions among previously abused youth.

Highlights

  • Violence victimization among youth is recognized as a public health problem

  • Youth violence is recognized as a significant public health problem [1] and the strong associations between violence exposure and health risk behaviours and physical and psychological ill health are well documented [1,2,3].The WHO categorizes violence victimization into self-inflicted, interpersonal, and community violence [4]

  • Young men have a higher prevalence of physical violence exposure than young women [4,5,10], while experience of sexual abuse consistently shows a higher prevalence in young women [5,11,12]

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Summary

Introduction

Violence victimization among youth is recognized as a public health problem. The objective was to analyze the risk pattern of emotional, physical, and sexual abuse during the past 12 months by gender, sociodemographic factors, health risk behaviors, and exposure to abuse before the age of 15, among young men and women attending youth health centers in Sweden. Young men have a higher prevalence of physical violence exposure than young women [4,5,10], while experience of sexual abuse consistently shows a higher prevalence in young women [5,11,12]. It is well-known that low age is a risk factor for exposure to violence in both young men and women [6,10,13], in adolescence and young adulthood, it is unclear at which age the violence exposure declines. The association between violence victimization among youth and immigration status in a European context is not known

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