Evaluating the Acceptability of Four Versions of a Child Sexual Abuse Prevention Program |
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Authors: | Brandon Kopp |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, Ohio State University , Columbus, Ohio, USA |
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Abstract: | Fifty-nine college students used a modified version of the Treatment Evaluation Inventory-Short Form to evaluate the acceptability of four versions of a sexual abuse prevention program for 10-year-old children. The four versions include an information-based training approach or a behavioral skills training (BST) approach with a focus on strangers or known individuals as perpetrators of sexual abuse. A significant effect was found for both training method and type of perpetrator, with information-based approaches involving strangers as perpetrators rated the most acceptable. These results suggest that college students were most comfortable with sexual abuse prevention training programs for 10-year-olds when the programs did not involve an active rehearsal component and when the program focused on abuse perpetrated by a stranger rather than a known individual. |
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Keywords: | acceptability behavioral skills training children prevention sexual abuse |
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