Sister-brother Incest: Data from Anonymous Computer Assisted Self Interviews

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Abstract

Retrospective data were entered anonymously by 1,178 adult men using computer-assisted self-interview. Twenty-seven were victims of sister-brother incest (SBI), 119 were victims of child sexual abuse by an adult female (CSA-AF) before 18 years of age, 1,032 were controls. SBI was often the first sexual experience for the victim. Our findings were consistent with other reports of early and persistent hyper-eroticization of incest victims. SBI increased the likelihood of engaging in behaviors as an adult consistent with a co-existing or primary male-male sexual orientation, and SBI and CSA-AF had deleterious impacts on adult men's sexual adjustment with their adult partners. © 2014 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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O’Keefe, S. L., Beard, K. W., Swindell, S., Stroebel, S. S., Griffee, K., & Young, D. H. (2014). Sister-brother Incest: Data from Anonymous Computer Assisted Self Interviews. Sexual Addiction and Compulsivity, 21(1), 1–38. https://doi.org/10.1080/10720162.2013.877410

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