# Emotional reactions and psychological responses expressed by adolescent and adult women survivors of sexual violence during outpatient follow-up

**Authors:** Ana Luiza Teixeira, Stephanie Oliveira de Lima, Daniela de Oliveira Godoi, Alejandra Suyapa Becerra-Torres, José Paulo Guida, Renata Cruz Azevedo, Arlete Fernandes

PMC · DOI: 10.61622/rbgo/2025rbgo37 · Revista Brasileira de Ginecologia e Obstetrícia · 2025-07-15

## TL;DR

This study compares the psychological reactions of adolescent and adult women who survived sexual violence, showing differences in emotions and care-seeking behavior.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into age-related differences in emotional and psychological responses to sexual violence among female survivors.

## Key findings

- Adolescents experienced more shame and delayed care-seeking compared to adult women.
- Adult women reported higher rates of anxiety, disclosure of violence, and psychotropic medication use.
- Both groups showed significant psychological impacts, emphasizing the need for tailored psychological support.

## Abstract

To evaluate psychological support data for survivors of sexual violence (SV) and compare the attitudes, responses, and feelings in adolescent and adult women.

This was a retrospective study with two cohorts of female survivors of sexual violence, treated between 2011 and 2022. Women who had at least one psychological evaluation were included. The variables were sociodemographic; characteristics of violence; feelings; attitudes; symptoms observed/reported during support; time until emergency care; and indication of psychotropic medications. We calculated the mean and standard deviation (SD) and used the λ-Square or Fisher's Exact test and the Mann-Whitney test for comparative analysis. The significance level adopted was 5%.

Five hundred and twenty-one adolescents, mean age 14.8 (SD±2.0) and 312 adult women, mean age 31.7 years (SD±10.7), were compared. Two-thirds of all women reported themselves as white; adolescents took longer to seek care (p<0.001) more frequently than the adult group. Adult women had more histories of sexual abuse (p<0.001), penetration attacks (p<0.001), reported greater perception and disclosed violence more frequently (p<0.001) than the adolescent group. Adolescents reported more shame (p<0.001) while the group of adults more frequently expressed feelings of insecurity, anguish, expressions of crying, revolt, anger, humiliation and apathy. Anxious symptoms were expressed by 60% of adults and 44% of adolescents and the prescription of psychotropic medications was higher in the adult group compared to adolescents (p<0.001).

Both groups of survivors suffered psychological impacts after SV, expressing/reporting different reactions to distress. These results highlight the importance of access to psychological support after SV.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Anxious symptoms (MESH:D012816), SV (MESH:D050035), sexual abuse (MESH:D000082002)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

25 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12266851/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12266851