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Predictors of symptom severity and treatment attendance amongst rape and sexual assault survivors attending a Cape Town crisis counselling service

Despite the prevalence of rape in South Africa and its association with a high risk of mental health difficulties, little research has examined the specific predictors of post-rape symptom severity or counselling retention rates of treatment-seeking rape survivors. This mixed methods study aimed to...

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Main Author: Dollman, Nicola
Other Authors: Kaminer, Debra
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Psychology 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Dollman, Nicola
author2 Kaminer, Debra
author_browse Dollman, Nicola
Kaminer, Debra
author_facet Kaminer, Debra
Dollman, Nicola
author_sort Dollman, Nicola
collection Thesis
description Despite the prevalence of rape in South Africa and its association with a high risk of mental health difficulties, little research has examined the specific predictors of post-rape symptom severity or counselling retention rates of treatment-seeking rape survivors. This mixed methods study aimed to investigate predictors of symptom severity and treatment attendance amongst rape survivors attending a crisis counselling service in Cape Town. The quantitative phase of the research was comprised of a retrospective chart review of 482 intake files at three Rape Crisis counselling centres in Cape Town between 2012 and 2016. The qualitative phase involved four focus group interviews with 25 Rape Crisis counsellors at these three counselling centres. Quantitative data were analysed using bivariate statistics, a multiple linear regression and a zero-truncated negative binomial. Multiple linear regression analysis revealed that being English-speaking, reporting being raped (as opposed to reporting a sexual assault or attempted rape), and rape by an unknown perpetrator were associated with increased symptom severity. A zero-truncated negative binomial revealed that increased symptom severity, being male and identifying as a race other than black or coloured were associated with longer time in treatment. Counsellors perceived lower reported symptom severity to be influenced by clients’ ability to identify symptoms, while poverty, poor social support, experiences of other trauma and knowing the perpetrator were perceived to increase symptom severity. Being a survivor of drug-alcohol facilitated rape/incapacitated rape and having practical obstacles to attending treatment were perceived by counsellors to result in shorter treatment attendance. Motivation for attending counselling was also perceived to influence length of attendance. There was both convergence and divergence between the quantitative and qualitative results. The implications of the findings for future research and delivering counselling to rape survivors are discussed. Keywords: Rape; sexual assault; symptom severity; treatment attendance.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:08.355Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30507 Predictors of symptom severity and treatment attendance amongst rape and sexual assault survivors attending a Cape Town crisis counselling service Dollman, Nicola Kaminer, Debra Psychology Despite the prevalence of rape in South Africa and its association with a high risk of mental health difficulties, little research has examined the specific predictors of post-rape symptom severity or counselling retention rates of treatment-seeking rape survivors. This mixed methods study aimed to investigate predictors of symptom severity and treatment attendance amongst rape survivors attending a crisis counselling service in Cape Town. The quantitative phase of the research was comprised of a retrospective chart review of 482 intake files at three Rape Crisis counselling centres in Cape Town between 2012 and 2016. The qualitative phase involved four focus group interviews with 25 Rape Crisis counsellors at these three counselling centres. Quantitative data were analysed using bivariate statistics, a multiple linear regression and a zero-truncated negative binomial. Multiple linear regression analysis revealed that being English-speaking, reporting being raped (as opposed to reporting a sexual assault or attempted rape), and rape by an unknown perpetrator were associated with increased symptom severity. A zero-truncated negative binomial revealed that increased symptom severity, being male and identifying as a race other than black or coloured were associated with longer time in treatment. Counsellors perceived lower reported symptom severity to be influenced by clients’ ability to identify symptoms, while poverty, poor social support, experiences of other trauma and knowing the perpetrator were perceived to increase symptom severity. Being a survivor of drug-alcohol facilitated rape/incapacitated rape and having practical obstacles to attending treatment were perceived by counsellors to result in shorter treatment attendance. Motivation for attending counselling was also perceived to influence length of attendance. There was both convergence and divergence between the quantitative and qualitative results. The implications of the findings for future research and delivering counselling to rape survivors are discussed. Keywords: Rape; sexual assault; symptom severity; treatment attendance. 2019-08-23T14:45:23Z 2019-08-23T14:45:23Z 2019 2019-08-23T09:47:30Z Master Thesis Masters Master of Arts http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30507 Eng application/pdf Department of Psychology Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Psychology
Dollman, Nicola
Predictors of symptom severity and treatment attendance amongst rape and sexual assault survivors attending a Cape Town crisis counselling service
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Predictors of symptom severity and treatment attendance amongst rape and sexual assault survivors attending a Cape Town crisis counselling service
title_full Predictors of symptom severity and treatment attendance amongst rape and sexual assault survivors attending a Cape Town crisis counselling service
title_fullStr Predictors of symptom severity and treatment attendance amongst rape and sexual assault survivors attending a Cape Town crisis counselling service
title_full_unstemmed Predictors of symptom severity and treatment attendance amongst rape and sexual assault survivors attending a Cape Town crisis counselling service
title_short Predictors of symptom severity and treatment attendance amongst rape and sexual assault survivors attending a Cape Town crisis counselling service
title_sort predictors of symptom severity and treatment attendance amongst rape and sexual assault survivors attending a cape town crisis counselling service
topic Psychology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30507
work_keys_str_mv AT dollmannicola predictorsofsymptomseverityandtreatmentattendanceamongstrapeandsexualassaultsurvivorsattendingacapetowncrisiscounsellingservice