Profiles of Trauma Exposure and Biopsychosocial Health among Sex Trafficking Survivors: Exploring Differences in Help-Seeking Attitudes and Intentions

Doctor of Philosophy === School of Family Studies and Human Services === Briana S. Goff === Human sex trafficking is a complex and unique phenomenon involving the commercial sexual exploitation (CSE) of persons by means of force, fraud, or coercion. The purpose of this study was to investigate uniqu...

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Main Author: Ruhlman, Lauren
Language:en_US
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/38903
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spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-389032018-04-29T03:35:10Z Profiles of Trauma Exposure and Biopsychosocial Health among Sex Trafficking Survivors: Exploring Differences in Help-Seeking Attitudes and Intentions Ruhlman, Lauren Sex Trafficking Biopsychosocial Trauma Exposure Help-seeking Attitudes Help-seeking Behaviors Latent Profile Analysis Doctor of Philosophy School of Family Studies and Human Services Briana S. Goff Human sex trafficking is a complex and unique phenomenon involving the commercial sexual exploitation (CSE) of persons by means of force, fraud, or coercion. The purpose of this study was to investigate unique patterns of trauma exposure and biopsychosocial health among a sample of CSE survivors. Results from a latent profile analysis with 135 adults trafficked in the United States yielded three distinct survivor sub-groups: mildly distressed, moderately distressed, and severely distressed. The mildly distressed class (18.5%) was characterized by the lowest reports of trauma exposure and an absence of clinically significant psycho-social stress symptoms. The moderately distressed class (48.89%) endorsed comparatively medial levels of trauma exposure, as well as clinically significant disturbance in six domains of psycho-social health. The severely distressed class (32.59%) reported the highest degree of trauma exposure and exhibited clinically significant symptoms of pervasive psycho-social stress across all domains assessed. To better understand variation in CSE survivors’ engagement with formal support services, this study also examined differences in help-seeking attitudes and intentions between latent classes. Results indicated that compared to those in the mildly and moderately distressed classes, severely distressed survivors endorsed significantly more unfavorable attitudes toward seeking professional help, along with no intention to seek help from any source when facing a personal or emotional crisis. Findings from this study provide a snapshot of significant heterogeneity in trauma exposure and biopsychosocial health among CSE survivors, as well as associated differences in help-seeking attitudes and intentions. The identification of distinct survivor sub-groups in these and future analyses mark an important intermediate step toward developing empirically-testable support services that are specifically designed to meet the unique needs of CSE survivors. 2018-04-23T18:15:59Z 2018-04-23T18:15:59Z 2018 May Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2097/38903 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Sex Trafficking
Biopsychosocial
Trauma Exposure
Help-seeking Attitudes
Help-seeking Behaviors
Latent Profile Analysis
spellingShingle Sex Trafficking
Biopsychosocial
Trauma Exposure
Help-seeking Attitudes
Help-seeking Behaviors
Latent Profile Analysis
Ruhlman, Lauren
Profiles of Trauma Exposure and Biopsychosocial Health among Sex Trafficking Survivors: Exploring Differences in Help-Seeking Attitudes and Intentions
description Doctor of Philosophy === School of Family Studies and Human Services === Briana S. Goff === Human sex trafficking is a complex and unique phenomenon involving the commercial sexual exploitation (CSE) of persons by means of force, fraud, or coercion. The purpose of this study was to investigate unique patterns of trauma exposure and biopsychosocial health among a sample of CSE survivors. Results from a latent profile analysis with 135 adults trafficked in the United States yielded three distinct survivor sub-groups: mildly distressed, moderately distressed, and severely distressed. The mildly distressed class (18.5%) was characterized by the lowest reports of trauma exposure and an absence of clinically significant psycho-social stress symptoms. The moderately distressed class (48.89%) endorsed comparatively medial levels of trauma exposure, as well as clinically significant disturbance in six domains of psycho-social health. The severely distressed class (32.59%) reported the highest degree of trauma exposure and exhibited clinically significant symptoms of pervasive psycho-social stress across all domains assessed. To better understand variation in CSE survivors’ engagement with formal support services, this study also examined differences in help-seeking attitudes and intentions between latent classes. Results indicated that compared to those in the mildly and moderately distressed classes, severely distressed survivors endorsed significantly more unfavorable attitudes toward seeking professional help, along with no intention to seek help from any source when facing a personal or emotional crisis. Findings from this study provide a snapshot of significant heterogeneity in trauma exposure and biopsychosocial health among CSE survivors, as well as associated differences in help-seeking attitudes and intentions. The identification of distinct survivor sub-groups in these and future analyses mark an important intermediate step toward developing empirically-testable support services that are specifically designed to meet the unique needs of CSE survivors.
author Ruhlman, Lauren
author_facet Ruhlman, Lauren
author_sort Ruhlman, Lauren
title Profiles of Trauma Exposure and Biopsychosocial Health among Sex Trafficking Survivors: Exploring Differences in Help-Seeking Attitudes and Intentions
title_short Profiles of Trauma Exposure and Biopsychosocial Health among Sex Trafficking Survivors: Exploring Differences in Help-Seeking Attitudes and Intentions
title_full Profiles of Trauma Exposure and Biopsychosocial Health among Sex Trafficking Survivors: Exploring Differences in Help-Seeking Attitudes and Intentions
title_fullStr Profiles of Trauma Exposure and Biopsychosocial Health among Sex Trafficking Survivors: Exploring Differences in Help-Seeking Attitudes and Intentions
title_full_unstemmed Profiles of Trauma Exposure and Biopsychosocial Health among Sex Trafficking Survivors: Exploring Differences in Help-Seeking Attitudes and Intentions
title_sort profiles of trauma exposure and biopsychosocial health among sex trafficking survivors: exploring differences in help-seeking attitudes and intentions
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/38903
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