Introduction
Sexual assault can traumatize the victim and lead to major life issues, such as post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The victim may develop deeply disturbing mental issues that lead the victim to become a sexual abuser later on in life, which has been found to be the case especially for victims abused in childhood (Groth & Burgess, 1979). Trauma affects every individual differently. Some are aware of the issue and seek help. Others attempt to self-medicate by turning to drugs or alcohol or risky sexual behavior, which further leads to destructive behavior. Others are unaware that they have been traumatized and struggle to understand or deal with their emotions. This paper will discuss treatment available for victims of sexual assault, ways to prevent it, and how prevention is being implemented.
Treatment
One of the most common forms of treatment for sexual assault trauma is cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). CBT focuses on identifying the negative emotions, factors and triggers that will cause a person to enter into a negative state that then leads them into all manner of various other harmful activities. Once these factors are identified, the person can then begin to focus on more positive responses and behaviors to help prevent the slide into destructive behavior or the kind of negative mental and emotional states that lead to a lower quality of life (ABCT, 2019).
According to the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies (ABCT, 2019), sexual assault trauma can be so damaging because “during a sexual assault, the survivor has to deal with feelings of powerlessness and uncertainty about whether he or she will survive.” This feeling of powerlessness can overwhelm one’s psychology and create an internal sense of self-doubt and helplessness. It can cause one’s self-esteem to crumble, and one’s self-efficacy to vanish. According to the ABCT (2019), “survivors may no longer feel safe, may lose self-esteem, feel powerless, and lose the ability to trust others or develop intimacy.” To address these issues, treatment has to focus on ways of constructing new behaviors that the sexual assault victim can pursue in order to replace the old negative emotions, thoughts and actions with new, positive emotions, thoughts and actions.
Sometimes the treatment process is more complicated because the trauma the survivor experiences is more deeply rooted. The victim can become withdrawn, isolated, anti-social, and self-destructive. Flashbacks, sounds, smells, environments can all trigger a reaction that takes the victim out of the present and immediately plunges the person back into the time of the assault and causes the victim to experience it all over again in a vivid way. This is the essence of dealing with PTSD, and it can be quite challenging to treat.
However, there are ways to treat trauma stemming from sexual addiction, and CBT can help. CBT focuses on identifying and working towards goals that can improve the life of the survivor. The goals can focus on ways of acting, thinking, feeling and dealing with mental or physical issues stemming from the attack. While there are many options available for treating trauma, the unique quality of CBT is that it does not try to probe the unconscious mind the way other psychotherapists may...
References
ABCT. (2019). Sexual assault. Retrieved from http://www.abct.org/Information/?m=mInformation&fa=fs_SEXUAL_ASSAULT
Bennett, J. (2018). Combating Sexual Assault With the Military Ethic: Exploring Culture, Military Institutions, and Norms-Based Preventive Policy. Armed Forces & Society, 44(4), 707-730.
Groth, A. N., & Burgess, A. W. (1979). Sexual trauma in the life histories of rapists and child molesters. Victimology, 4(1), 10-16.
Psychology Today. (2018). PET. Retrieved from https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapy-types/prolonged-exposure-therapy
Stimson, C. (2013). Sexual Assault in the Military: Understanding the Problem and How to Fix It. Retrieved from https://www.heritage.org/defense/report/sexual-assault-the-military-understanding-the-problem-and-how-fix-it
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