2018
DOI: 10.1080/15325024.2018.1500102
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Stigmatized Loss in Women Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse in South Africa

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Included for analysis was only empirical retrospective studies, published between 1992 and 2019, in which women survivors of CSA self-reported loss relating to their CSA. Of the studies for the summary analysis, the majority ( n = 13) were from the United States, one study each was found in Australia (Goldman & Bode, 2012), Canada (Mcevoy & Daniluk, 1995), New Zealand (Romans et al, 2001), Israel (Chopra, 2006), and South Africa (Ebrahim et al, 2018), and two were unspecified (Oz, 2005; Roth & Newman, 1992). Ten of the 20 studies specified the participant’s race.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Included for analysis was only empirical retrospective studies, published between 1992 and 2019, in which women survivors of CSA self-reported loss relating to their CSA. Of the studies for the summary analysis, the majority ( n = 13) were from the United States, one study each was found in Australia (Goldman & Bode, 2012), Canada (Mcevoy & Daniluk, 1995), New Zealand (Romans et al, 2001), Israel (Chopra, 2006), and South Africa (Ebrahim et al, 2018), and two were unspecified (Oz, 2005; Roth & Newman, 1992). Ten of the 20 studies specified the participant’s race.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In locating the reference of the psychological enigma, the problem is that it exclusively focused on the ability of a child to perform adult-like mourning rather than on a definition of childhood mourning. Christina Sekaer, as cited in Ebrahim, Fouch e, and Walker-Williams (2019) defined childhood mourning as the process wherein a child optimally reacts to death and continues with comparatively normal development. The more neutral manner to approach a child's mourning is to provide some adequate support from an adult caretaker (e.g., older siblings, grandparents, relatives) who can help meet the needs of the child and allowing him or her to communicate his or her feelings towards parental death (Garber, 2008).…”
Section: Abstract Adolescence Childhood Mourning Tasks Parental Death...mentioning
confidence: 99%