Trauma and Social Reactions in Cases of Violence

Prevalence of Trauma
 
Childhood
Trauma
 
61% of adults > Adverse
Childhood Experience (CDC,
2016)
 
Sexual
Assault
 
Intimate
Partner
Violence
 
Stalking
 
1 in 4 women, 1
in 7 men (CDC,
2010)
 
1 in 3 women, 1
in 4 men (CDC,
2010)
 
1 in 3 women, 1
in 6 men (CDC,
2010)
 
CSULB =
38,273
students
 
23,346
 
3,923 men
7,527 women
 
2,241 men
5,645 women
 
2,614 men
7,527 women
Disclosure to Friends & Family
N
early half of all women & a quarter of all men will
experience sexual assault, physical violence, or stalking in
their lifetime
Disclosure to Friends & Family
N
early half of all women & a quarter of all men will
experience sexual assault, physical violence, or stalking in
their lifetime
Disclosure to Friends & Family
N
early half of all women & a quarter of all men will
experience sexual assault, physical violence, or stalking in
their lifetime
Each survivor of sexual & relationship trauma tells an
average of 3 people, primarily friends and family
Social Reactions
Helpful social reactions
Emotional support
Tangible aid
 
Unhelpful social reactions
Blame and doubt
Control
Distraction
Minimization
Treat Differently
Impact of
Social
Reactions
Negative Social
Reactions
Positive
Social
Reactions
More important to avoid negative reactions
Victim Blame
Victim Blame
Society tends to focus on the
victim rather than the
perpetrator
There is nothing about
someone’s vulnerability that
causes
 other people to hurt
them
Imagine…
Right to Say No at Any
Time for Any Reason
Activity
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This content highlights the prevalence of trauma, including intimate partner violence, childhood trauma, sexual assault, and stalking. It discusses disclosures to friends and family, social reactions survivors may face, victim blame, and the importance of providing support and understanding to survivors. The images included depict statistics, disclosure patterns, social reactions, victim blaming, and the right to say no. The overall message emphasizes the need for empathy, support, and positive social reactions towards survivors of violence.

  • Trauma awareness
  • Violence prevalence
  • Social reactions
  • Victim blame
  • Support for survivors

Uploaded on Oct 10, 2024 | 0 Views


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  1. Prevalence of Trauma Intimate Partner Violence Childhood Trauma Sexual Assault Stalking 1 in 3 women, 1 in 4 men (CDC, 2010) 61% of adults > Adverse Childhood Experience (CDC, 2016) 1 in 4 women, 1 in 7 men (CDC, 2010) 1 in 3 women, 1 in 6 men (CDC, 2010) CSULB = 38,273 students 3,923 men 7,527 women 23,346 2,241 men 5,645 women 2,614 men 7,527 women

  2. Disclosure to Friends & Family Nearly half of all women & a quarter of all men will experience sexual assault, physical violence, or stalking in their lifetime

  3. Disclosure to Friends & Family Nearly half of all women & a quarter of all men will experience sexual assault, physical violence, or stalking in their lifetime

  4. Disclosure to Friends & Family Nearly half of all women & a quarter of all men will experience sexual assault, physical violence, or stalking in their lifetime Each survivor of sexual & relationship trauma tells an average of 3 people, primarily friends and family

  5. Social Reactions Unhelpful social reactions Blame and doubt Control Distraction Minimization Treat Differently Helpful social reactions Emotional support Tangible aid

  6. Negative Social Reactions Positive Social Reactions Impact of Social Reactions More important to avoid negative reactions

  7. Victim Blame Victim Blame Society tends to focus on the victim rather than the perpetrator There is nothing about someone s vulnerability that causes other people to hurt them

  8. Imagine

  9. Right to Say No at Any Time for Any Reason

  10. Activity One person reads the line of the survivor The other person reads the line of the support provider Pair up with another participant How did it feel as a survivor hearing this? How did if feel as a support provider saying this? What else can you do to support survivors?

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