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Change Matters: Binge Drinking and Drugging Victimization over Time in Three College Freshman Cohorts
Journal of School Violence ( IF 2.835 ) Pub Date : 2020-11-15 , DOI: 10.1080/15388220.2020.1830787
Leah C. Butler 1 , Bonnie S. Fisher 2 , Rachael Schilling 3 , Nicole V. Lasky 4 , Suzanne C. Swan 5
Affiliation  

ABSTRACT

The “once bitten, twice shy” (OBTS) hypothesis argues that crime victims who change their involvement in risky lifestyle behaviors reduce their likelihood of experiencing repeat victimization. Tests of this hypothesis have yielded weak to mixed results, which may be due to methodological issues. We address these methodological issues by testing the OBTS hypothesis for repeat drugging victimization with survey data from a panel of three freshman cohorts at three large, public universities. Supportive of the OBTS hypothesis, the multivariate results show that, on average, those not drugged at Time 1 or Time 2 and those drugged at Time 1 and Time 2 increased the number of days they binge drank in the past month significantly more than those who were drugged at Time 1 only. Our findings have implications for both victimology theory and drugging prevention programming.



中文翻译:

变化的问题:随着时间的流逝,在三个大学新生队列中暴饮暴食和吸毒

摘要

“一次被咬,两次害羞”(OBTS)假说认为,改变受害人对危险生活方式行为的参与的犯罪受害人会减少遭受重复受害的可能性。对这一假设的检验得出的结果微弱至混合结果,这可能是由于方法问题所致。我们通过使用来自三所大型公立大学的三个新生小组的调查数据来检验OBTS假设是否重复吸毒受害,从而解决了这些方法论问题。多变量结果支持OBTS假设,平均而言,在过去的一个月中,在时间1或时间2没服药的人以及在时间1和时间2服药的人,其暴饮暴饮的天数比那些仅在时间1被吸毒。

更新日期:2020-12-23
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