| Sibling Sexual Abuse | |
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Child sexual abuse is a difficult thing to define. While an adult having contact with a child
is easily defined as abuse, especially if that adult is related to the child, more difficult
issues come into play when the perpetrator is another child in the family, especially when
the child is 10 years old or younger. Cantwell (1988) reported several cases investigated
in Denver in which children under the age of 10 years were molesting younger peers,
sometimes siblings or cousins and sometimes unrelated children, in a variety of settings
including multi-family households, school busses, and neighborhood children's homes.
Parents may interpret this behavior at times as normal child sexual curiosity, or may spank
the children to halt this behavior. Often in these cases, the child perpetrators were abused
themselves at a young age, but, due to the shock experienced on discovery of the abuse
and the focus on the "victim," they did not receive services and their own history of abuse
was not discovered until later.
Frequency
Typically sibling or cousin sexual contact is defined as "abuse" when it is marked by a five
year difference; when the children are less than five years apart in age, the interaction is
not deemed abusive unless force, coercion, injury, or penetration occurs. The criteria of
force and/or coercion may be the most highly associated with negative outcomes,
regardless of the specific sexual behavior (e.g., kissing, fondling, simulated intercourse, or
exhibition) experienced (Haugaard and Tilly, 1988). Incidence of sibling or cousin sexual
abuse varies greatly among studies, ranging from 10% to 40% among those reporting
sexual abuse, although sibling and cousin sexual abuse are about equal in such samples
(De Jong, 1988). Typically, the abuse begins when the victim is around six to seven years
of age.
It is unclear whether "non abuse" contacts always result in psychological harm or maladjustment. It may be that normal sexual curiosity between siblings and cousins that happens only once is not harmful. As to repeated sexual contact between the children, two models have typically been proposed. In the first model of contact, often called "nurturance-oriented," the children consensually seek sexual contact with each other over time, in part to provide nurturing and affection that is missing elsewhere in the family. It may begin with elements of loyalty, mutual satisfaction, and support, and may or may not turn coercive or lead to abuse outside the home as the child grows older. Some argue, however, that sibling sexual contact during preteen and teen years, even if consensual, interferes with the development of social skills and support systems beyond the family. This may prevent appropriate separation and differentiation from the family (Cicirelli, 1995). The second model of contact entails a clear attempt by the abuser to experience some power, either for it's own sake or to possibly re-enact and master their own experiences of abuse. Research has attempted to study this type of abuse and isolate its effects. However, such abuse is often associated with sexual abuse and promiscuity, as well as additional family dysfunction, and it is difficult to determine the effects of sibling abuse as separated from other forms of abuse (Cicirelli, 1995). Consequences
Some of the research (Meiselman, 1978) comparing incest victims and non-abused women
indicates that incest victims have more problems in romantic and family relationships, and
more sexual problems. They appear to show no significant differences in regards to
presence of depression, suicide risk, substance abuse, or anxiety, although they are likely
to have more severe depression when it is present. Other studies (Herman, 1981) show
that incest victims are more likely to suffer physical abuse in the family along with the
sexual abuse, to experience teen pregnancy, to run away, and to make suicide attempts
when compared to the average teen. Those attempting suicide are more likely to do so
without obvious signs of depression, to attempt while using substances, and to attempt
during the adolescent years between the ages of 14 and 16 (Goodwin, 1982). Finkelhor
(1979, 1984) found college students reporting childhood sexual abuse had lower self-esteem, and others have found that incest victims were more likely to suffer more
victimizing incidents over a longer period of time, and to wait longer for treatment after
disclosure.
Edwall and Hoffman studied teens admitting and denying incest, as previous research (Russell, 1986) found that 23% of adolescent girls entering treatment reported some intrafamilial abuse. They found incest victims
Higgs and colleagues (Higgs et al, 1992) found offered that children who experienced more frequent incidents of incest, who had a close relationship with the abuser, who experienced violence during some of the abuse and consent during other sexual experiences, and who engaged in more serious sexual behavior (i.e., intercourse) were more likely to become abusers themselves. Further, failing to internalize aspects of a nurturing and psychologically aware parent can lead to a failure to develop the kind of empathy that would inhibit abuse of others. Causes
De Jong (1988) and Daie et al (1989) present several factors in families that can lead to
sibling or cousin abuse. Abuse can arise in an environment that:
Cicirelli (1995) notes that the stereotypes of incest occurring primarily in poor, less educated, ethnic minority families has not been supported by literature. Sibling abuse happens in families at all levels of income and education, and across ethnicities. Further, Smith and Israel (1987) note that there is no "type" of sibling who is likely to abuse, and personality characteristics are highly varied across abusers. Rather, sibling sexual abuse is the result of fragmenting and dysfunctional family processes, and not a cause of the family dysfunction. In response to the inadequacies of the family, a stronger and inappropriately close sibling bond may develop to compensate for the parents' dysfunction, or an abusive bond may develop and replicate the parents' dysfunction. In families where abuse occurs, the dysfunction that led to the abuse may also lead to a poor response once the abuse is discovered. Wiehe (1990) noted that poorly responding families typically:
Poorly responding families may be perpetuating the abuse in two ways. First, they fail to halt the abuse in the home. Second, by failing in this, they create a sense that the child can not be protected, and that the perpetrator was "chosen" over the victim. Such actions and the feelings of helplessness and rejection that result may prompt the abused child to become an abuser as well, seeking power and revenge (Johnson, 1989). References
Cantwell, H., (1988). Child Sexual Abuse: Very Young Perpetrators. Child Abuse and
Neglect, 12, 579-582.
Cicirelli, V. C. (1995). Sibling relationships across the life span. New York: Plenum Press. Daie, N., Witztum, E., and Eleff, M. (1989). Long-term effects of sibling abuse. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 50(11), 428-431. Copied from the web. De Jong, A. (1988). Sexual Interactions Among Siblings and Cousins: Experimentation or Exploitation? Child Abuse and Neglect, 12(2), 271-279. Edwall, G., and Hoffman, N. (1988). Correlates of incest reported by adolescent girls in treatment for substance abuse. In L. Walker (Ed.), Handbook on sexual abuse of children: Assessment and treatment issues. New York: Springer Publishing Company Finkelhor, D. (1979). Sexually Victimized Children. New York: Free Press Finkelhor, D. (1984). Child Sexual Abuse: theory and Research. New York: Free Press Goodwin, J. (1982). Suicide Attempts: A preventable Complication of Incest. In J. Goodwin, (Ed.), Sexual Abuse: Incest victims and their families. Boston: John Wright. Haugaard, J., and Tilly, C., (1988). Characteristics predicting children's responses to sexual encounters with other children. Child Abuse and Neglect, 12, 209-218. Herman, J. (1981). Father-daughter incest. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Higgs, D. C., Canavan, M. M., and Meyer, W. J. (1992). Moving from defense to offense: the development of an adolescent female sex offender. Journal of Sex Research, 29(1), 131-139. Johnson, T. C. (1989). Female child perpetrators: Children who molest other children. Child Abuse and Neglect, 13(4), 571-585 Meiselman, K. (1978). Incest. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Russell, D. (1986). The secret trauma: Incest in the lives of girls and women. New York: Basic Books. Smith, H., and Israel, E. (1987). Sibling incest: A study of the dynamics of 25 cases. Child Abuse and Neglect, 11(1), 101-108. Weihe, V. R. (1990). Sibling abuse: Hidden physical, emotional, and sexual trauma. Lexington, MA: D. C. Heath. |