Non-fatal strangulation in sexual assault: A study of clinical and assault characteristics highlighting the role of intimate partner violence

Objective: To describe the prevalence, risk factors, signs and symptoms of non-fatal strangulation (NFS) in women referred to a Sexual Assault Resource Centre (SARC) following recent sexual assault. Methods: A cross-sectional study using data routinely collected at time of forensic examination of wo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zilkens, Renate, Phillips, M., Kelly, M., Mukhtar, Syed Aqif, Semmens, Smith, D.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Churchill Livingstone 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/14465
_version_ 1848748629901180928
author Zilkens, Renate
Phillips, M.
Kelly, M.
Mukhtar, Syed Aqif
Semmens
Smith, D.
author_facet Zilkens, Renate
Phillips, M.
Kelly, M.
Mukhtar, Syed Aqif
Semmens
Smith, D.
author_sort Zilkens, Renate
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Objective: To describe the prevalence, risk factors, signs and symptoms of non-fatal strangulation (NFS) in women referred to a Sexual Assault Resource Centre (SARC) following recent sexual assault. Methods: A cross-sectional study using data routinely collected at time of forensic examination of women (age 13 years) referred to the Western Australian SARC between Jan-2009 and Mar-2015 alleging a recent sexual assault. Data on demographics, assault characteristics and forensic findings were available. Results: A total of 1064 women were included in the study; 79 (7.4%) alleged NFS during the sexual assault. The prevalence of NFS varied significantly by age-group and assailant type. Of women aged 30 e 39 years 15.1% gave a history of NFS compared to less than 8.2% in all other age groups. Of women assaulted by an intimate partner, 22.5% gave a history of NFS compared to less than 6% of women assaulted by other assailant types. Of all sexual assaults with NFS, intimate partners were the assailant in 58.2% of cases, whereas in sexual assault cases without NFS, intimate partners were the assailant in 15.9% of cases. Odds of NFS were 8.4 times higher in women sexually assaulted by an intimate partner compared to women assaulted by an acquaintance/friend and 4.9 times higher compared to women assaulted by a stranger. When considering both age and assailant type the highest proportion of NFS (33.9%) was in women aged 30 e 39 years sexually assaulted by an intimate partner. Other factors associated with NFS during sexual assault included deprivation of liberty, verbal threats, being assaulted in the woman's home and use of additional blunt force. External physical signs of NFS were absent in 49.4% of all NFS sexual assault cases.Conclusions: This study identifies and quantifies NFS risk factors in female sexual assault and highlights the strong association with intimate partner sexual assault. Greater awareness of NFS in sexual assault should lead to improvement in medical screening, forensic management and safety risk assessment by sexual assault and domestic violence services, emergency departments and police.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T07:08:05Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-14465
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:08:05Z
publishDate 2016
publisher Churchill Livingstone
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-144652017-09-13T15:39:43Z Non-fatal strangulation in sexual assault: A study of clinical and assault characteristics highlighting the role of intimate partner violence Zilkens, Renate Phillips, M. Kelly, M. Mukhtar, Syed Aqif Semmens Smith, D. Objective: To describe the prevalence, risk factors, signs and symptoms of non-fatal strangulation (NFS) in women referred to a Sexual Assault Resource Centre (SARC) following recent sexual assault. Methods: A cross-sectional study using data routinely collected at time of forensic examination of women (age 13 years) referred to the Western Australian SARC between Jan-2009 and Mar-2015 alleging a recent sexual assault. Data on demographics, assault characteristics and forensic findings were available. Results: A total of 1064 women were included in the study; 79 (7.4%) alleged NFS during the sexual assault. The prevalence of NFS varied significantly by age-group and assailant type. Of women aged 30 e 39 years 15.1% gave a history of NFS compared to less than 8.2% in all other age groups. Of women assaulted by an intimate partner, 22.5% gave a history of NFS compared to less than 6% of women assaulted by other assailant types. Of all sexual assaults with NFS, intimate partners were the assailant in 58.2% of cases, whereas in sexual assault cases without NFS, intimate partners were the assailant in 15.9% of cases. Odds of NFS were 8.4 times higher in women sexually assaulted by an intimate partner compared to women assaulted by an acquaintance/friend and 4.9 times higher compared to women assaulted by a stranger. When considering both age and assailant type the highest proportion of NFS (33.9%) was in women aged 30 e 39 years sexually assaulted by an intimate partner. Other factors associated with NFS during sexual assault included deprivation of liberty, verbal threats, being assaulted in the woman's home and use of additional blunt force. External physical signs of NFS were absent in 49.4% of all NFS sexual assault cases.Conclusions: This study identifies and quantifies NFS risk factors in female sexual assault and highlights the strong association with intimate partner sexual assault. Greater awareness of NFS in sexual assault should lead to improvement in medical screening, forensic management and safety risk assessment by sexual assault and domestic violence services, emergency departments and police. 2016 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/14465 10.1016/j.flm.2016.06.005 Churchill Livingstone restricted
spellingShingle Zilkens, Renate
Phillips, M.
Kelly, M.
Mukhtar, Syed Aqif
Semmens
Smith, D.
Non-fatal strangulation in sexual assault: A study of clinical and assault characteristics highlighting the role of intimate partner violence
title Non-fatal strangulation in sexual assault: A study of clinical and assault characteristics highlighting the role of intimate partner violence
title_full Non-fatal strangulation in sexual assault: A study of clinical and assault characteristics highlighting the role of intimate partner violence
title_fullStr Non-fatal strangulation in sexual assault: A study of clinical and assault characteristics highlighting the role of intimate partner violence
title_full_unstemmed Non-fatal strangulation in sexual assault: A study of clinical and assault characteristics highlighting the role of intimate partner violence
title_short Non-fatal strangulation in sexual assault: A study of clinical and assault characteristics highlighting the role of intimate partner violence
title_sort non-fatal strangulation in sexual assault: a study of clinical and assault characteristics highlighting the role of intimate partner violence
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/14465