“…Rape disclosure receipt is a relatively common phenomenon, with approximately 20-40% of college students (Banyard, Moynihan, Walsh, Cohn, & Ward, 2010; and 35% of women in a national sample (Paul et al, 2014) reporting this experience. Despite the support and services that disclosure may yield for to victims (e.g., Ahrens et al, 2007;Ullman, 2010;Ullman & Filipas, 2001), it is well-documented that negative reactions to disclosure lead to greater victim self-blame (Ullman, 1996), adverse mental health outcomes (Davis, Brickman, & Baker, 1991;Ullman & Filipas, 2001), and a decreased likelihood of reporting the assault to police (Ahrens, 2006). If the label given to an act of sexual violence by the victim or the disclosure recipient leads to a negative reaction (e.g., minimized severity of the assault), or if such a response is engendered by inconsistencies between the label assigned by the victim and how it is interpreted by the recipient, victim outcomes may be adversely affected.…”