Thursday, March 4, 2021

A new study from the University of Iowa sought to begin development of a possible approach to reduce the risk that college-aged men engage in sexually aggressive acts or risky sexual behavior.

Teresa Treat portrait
Teresa Treat

The study authors, led by Teresa Treat, professor in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences at Iowa, developed a 12-point list of sexual assault prevention strategies. The list was created by the researchers based on previous research into risk factors that are associated with sexually aggressive acts—such as heavy alcohol consumption, difficulties reading women’s cues, and not seeking consent for sexual activity.

The authors found that 71% of the college-aged men surveyed used the sexual assault prevention strategies on a regular basis over the past year. Yet 15% of the survey takers reported they seldom or never used the preventative strategies, and men who said they have engaged in sexually aggressive actions had been much less likely to use the strategies than their peers.

Study participants were asked how often they used 12 sexual aggression protective strategies. Those strategies include:

Explicitly ask a potential sexual partner for consent to engage in sexual behavior

Watch for reduction in your partner's enthusiasm level throughout a sexual encounter (e.g., becoming quieter or withdrawn or asking to stop or slow down)

Be aware that alcohol impairs your judgment and that of your partner, which can lead to behavior you or your partner later regret

The authors say the strategies may offer a potential avenue to tackling sexually aggressive behavior.

“We think we have a promising set of potential preventative strategies. We found most college men use these prevention strategies regularly,” says Treat, the study’s corresponding author. “The downside is some college men don’t use them much at all. Those college men who don’t use them much at all are much more likely to be sexually aggressive. So, future research should aim to evaluate whether they may be useful prevention targets.”

The survey group included more than 560 males at Arizona State University and Iowa, who earned course credit in a psychology class. The men answered questions that ranged from general biographical information (age, ethnicity, et cetera) to alcohol consumption, attitudes about women, sexual experience, and attitudes about sex.

The authors are revising the strategies based on feedback from the college students, and hope to administer the survey to a more racially and ethnically diverse pool.

“We also are in the beginning stages of figuring out how these protective strategies might be incorporated into prevention programs for further evaluation,” Treat says.

For information about workshops and trainings, ways to get involved, and initiatives on campus to help end gender-based violence and discrimination, please visit Ending Violence at Iowa.

The authors also developed an 11-point list of protective strategies to address risky sexual behavior, based on risk factors stemming from previous research into the issue. These strategies include using protection against pregnancy or sexually transmitted infections, or having ongoing sexual relationships with no more than one person.

In terms of risky sexual behavior, the study found:

  • Seven in 10 college-aged men surveyed reported they engaged in risky sexual behavior in the last year.
  • 55% of college-aged men surveyed reported they used the preventative strategies on a regular basis when it came to risky sexual behavior.
  • Nearly 3 in 10 (29%) of college-aged men surveyed reported they seldom or never used the preventative strategies when it came to risky sexual behavior.

The study, titled “Protective behavioral strategies for sexual aggression and risky sexual behavior,” was published online Jan. 25 in the journal Aggressive Behavior. Co-authors include William Corbin from Arizona State and Richard Viken from Indiana University-Bloomington.

The National Institutes of Health, through the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, funded the research.