Bibliographic Description |
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Study No.: |
25201 |
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Title: |
African American Experience of Sexual Assault in Maryland, 2003-2006 |
Principal Investigator(s): |
Weist, Mark D., University of Maryland. School of Medicine Pollitt-Hill, Jennifer, Maryland Coalition Against Sexual Assault Kinney, Linda, University of Maryland. School of Medicine Bryant, Yaphet , University of Maryland. School of Medicine Anthony, Laura, University of Maryland. School of Medicine Wilkerson, Jennifer, University of Maryland. School of Medicine |
Funding: |
United States Department of Justice. Office of Justice Programs. National Institute of Justice (03-MU-MU-0001) |
Bibliographic Citation: |
Weist, Mark D., Jennifer Pollitt-Hill, Linda Kinney, Yaphet Bryant, Laura Anthony, and Jennifer Wilkerson. African American Experience of Sexual Assault in Maryland, 2003-2006. ICPSR25201-v1. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2009-04-30. doi:10.3886/ICPSR25201.v1 |
Scope of Study |
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Summary: |
The purpose of this study was to better understand the problem of sexual assault among African American women in Maryland, assess their use of available resources in response to sexual assault, and explore their use of alternative sources of care. Researchers interviewed 223 female victims of sexual assault (Part 1 and Part 2) between January 2004 and July 2005 and conducted 21 focus groups (Part 3) with sexual assault resource service providers between 2003 and 2006. Criteria for inclusion in the interview component (Part 1 and Part 2) of the study included: African American or Caucasian female, aged 18 and over, resident of Maryland, and victim of sexual assault. There were four streams of recruitment for the interview portion of the study:
For Part 3 (Focus Group Qualitative Data), rape crisis center representatives and other community service provider representatives received a letter informing them that a focus group was going to be conducted at the end of their study training session and asked them for their participation. Part 1 (Victim Quantitative Data) includes items in the following categories: Personal Demographics, Details of the Sexual Assault, Medical Care, Law Enforcement, Prosecution/Court Process, Sexual Assault Center Services, Other Counseling Services, and Recommendations for Improvement. Part 2 (Victim Qualitative Data) includes responses to selected questions from Part 1. The data are organized by question, not by respondent. Part 3 (Focus Group Qualitative Data) includes questions on the needs of African American women who have been sexually assaulted, whether their needs are different from those of women of other racial/ethnic backgrounds, unique barriers to reporting sexual assault to police for African American women and their treatment by the criminal justice system, unique issues concerning the use of available resources by African American women, such as post-rape medical care and counseling services, and recommendations on how the state of Maryland could improve services for African American women who are the victims of sexual assault. |
Subject Terms: |
African Americans, rape, service providers, sex offenses, sexual assault, victim services, violence against women |
Smallest Geographic Unit: |
county |
Geographic Coverage: |
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Time Period: |
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Date of Collection: |
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Unit of Observation: |
individual |
Universe: |
For Part 1 and Part 2, the universe is all female African American or Caucasian victims of sexual assault aged 18 years or older in the state of Maryland who received services from a rape crisis center, community service provider, Historically Black College or University, or was housed at a detention center between January 2004 and July 2005. For Part 3, the universe is any representative of any rape crisis center, community service provider, Historically Black College or University, or detention center housing females in the state of Maryland between 2003 and 2006. |
Data Types: |
survey data |
Data Collection Notes: |
The qualitative data are available through restricted access procedures in two zip files. The file qda25201-0002_REST.zip (Part 2, Victim Qualitative Data) includes the interviewees' responses to 42 questions from the Part 1 (Victim Quantitative Data) questionnaire. The data are organized by question, not by respondent. The file qda25201-0003_REST.zip (Part 3, Focus Group Qualitative Data) includes the 21 focus group interviews with service providers. The qualitative data are available in Portable Document Format (PDF), rich text format, and plain text format. |
Methodology |
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Study Purpose: |
The purpose of this study was to better understand the problem of sexual assault among African American women in Maryland, assess their use of available resources in response to sexual assault, and explore their use of alternative sources of care. |
Study Design: |
To better understand the problem of sexual assault among African American women in Maryland, researchers interviewed 223 female victims of sexual assault (Part 1 and Part 2) and conducted 21 focus groups (Part 3) with sexual assault resource service providers. Criteria for inclusion in the interview component (Part 1 and Part 2) of the study included: African American or Caucasian female, aged 18 and over, a resident of Maryland, and a victim of sexual assault. There were four streams of recruitment for the interview portion of the study:
Four women, three with masters degrees and one with a bachelors degree in a mental health or public health discipline were recruited as interviewers for the project. Three of the interviewers were African American, one was Caucasian, and race of the interviewer was always matched for African American interviewees. The four interviewers underwent a day-long training coordinated by the University of Maryland on effective interviewing of sexual assault victims and the use of the interview instrument. Weekly meetings held at the Maryland Coalition Against Sexual Assault (MCASA) ensured that the interviewers were adhering to standard procedures in collecting the interviews, emphatically conducting the interviews, and supporting victims. Interviews took place from January 1, 2004, through July 2005 at each of the 18 rape crisis centers located throughout Maryland, at three correctional facilities, and in community sites. Interviews took between 45 minutes and 2 hours and 15 minutes. The length of interviews varied for many reasons, with a key dimension being whether particular services were received. At the completion of the interview, the interviewer gave the participant an unmarked sealed envelope that contained their ten dollar cash compensation. Some participants presented service needs, and if this was the case, after the formal interview, research staff attempted to assist interviewees in connecting to relevant services in their local community. Focus groups and training sessions (Part 3) were held between 2003 and 2006 with 21 professional groups, rape recovery programs, domestic violence only programs, sexual assault forensic exam programs, and Historically Black Colleges and Universities in Maryland. Training sessions were held with each of these 26 recruitment partners to explain the context, history, and purpose of the study as well as to discuss the ethical issues relating to human research studies, referral/recruitment protocol, and marketing materials. Rape crisis center representatives and other community service provider representatives received a letter informing them that a focus group was going to be conducted at the end of their study training session and asked them for their participation. Informed consent forms were given to the participants before the focus group was conducted. Each focus group utilized two facilitators and two note takers. The number of participants in the focus groups ranged from four to ten with an average of seven participants per group. Each focus group participant received a name tag with a number so that the participants' answers were not recorded by name. The focus group sessions were taped and notes were taken. The tapes were transcribed, and once transcribed, all audiotapes were destroyed. The transcriptions were augmented by written meeting notes. |
Sample: |
There were four streams of recruitment for the interview portion (Part 1 and Part 2) of the study:
Researchers conducted 223 interviews with sexual assault victims. For Part 3, rape crisis center representatives and other community service provider representatives received a letter informing them that a focus group was going to be conducted at the end of their study training session and asked them for their participation. They were informed about the purpose of the focus group, the topics to be covered, and the length of the session. A total of 21 focus groups were conducted. |
Weight: |
none |
Mode of Data Collection: |
face-to-face interview |
Description of Variables: |
Part 1 (Victim Quantitative Data) includes 110 items in the following categories: Personal Demographics (7 items), Details of the Sexual Assault (23 items), Medical Care (19 items), Law Enforcement (11 items), Prosecution/Court Process (11 items), Sexual Assault Center Services (22 items), Other Counseling Services (9 items), and Recommendations for Improvement (8 items). Part 2 (Victim Qualitative Data) includes verbatim responses to selected questions from Part 1. The data are organized by question, not by respondent. Part 3 (Focus Group Qualitative Data) includes questions on the needs of African American women who have been sexually assaulted, whether their needs are different from those of women of other racial/ethnic backgrounds, unique barriers to reporting sexual assault to police for African American women and their treatment by the criminal justice system, unique issues concerning the use of available resources by African American women such as post-rape medical care and counseling services, and recommendations on how the state of Maryland could improve services for African American women who are the victims of sexual assault. |
Response Rates: |
Response rates are not available. |
Access and Availability |
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Note: |
Detailed file-level information (such as record length, case count, and variable count) is listed in the file manifest. |
Original ICPSR Release: |
2009-04-30 |
Restrictions: |
The data are restricted from general dissemination. Users interested in obtaining these data must complete a Restricted Data Use Agreement form and specify the reasons for the request. A copy of the Restricted Data Use Agreement form can be requested by calling 800-999-0960. Researchers can also download this form as a Portable Document Format (PDF) file from the download page associated with this dataset. Completed forms should be returned to: Director, National Archive of Criminal Justice Data, Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research, Institute for Social Research, P.O. Box 1248, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1248, or by fax: 734-647-8200. |
Dataset(s): |
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