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Dive into the research topics where Henrietta H. Filipas is active.

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Featured researches published by Henrietta H. Filipas.


Journal of Traumatic Stress | 2001

Predictors of PTSD symptom severity and social reactions in sexual assault victims.

Sarah E. Ullman; Henrietta H. Filipas

Demographics, assault variables, and postassault responses were analyzed as correlates of PTSD symptom severity in a sample of 323 sexual assault victims. Regression analyses indicated that less education, greater perceived life threat, and receipt of more negative social reactions upon disclosing assault were each related to greater PTSD symptom severity. Ethnic minority victims reported more negative social reactions from others. Victims of more severe sexual victimization reported fewer positive, but more negative reactions from others. Greater extent of disclosure of the assault was related to more positive and fewer negative social reactions. Telling more persons about the assault was related to more negative and positive reactions. Implications of these results for developing contextual theoretical models of rape-related PTSD are discussed.


Journal of Interpersonal Violence | 2006

Child Sexual Abuse, Coping Responses, Self-Blame, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, and Adult Sexual Revictimization

Henrietta H. Filipas; Sarah E. Ullman

The present study examined the psychological sequelae of child sexual abuse (CSA) and the factors that contributed to revictimization in the form of adult sexual assault (ASA) using a survey of 577 female college students. CSA characteristics, maladaptive coping in response to CSA, degree of self-blame at the time of the abuse and currently, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms were examined as predictors of revictimization. Results indicated that individuals who reported both CSA and ASA had more PTSD symptoms, were more likely to use drugs or alcohol to cope, act out sexually, withdraw from people, and seek therapy services. In addition, the revictimized group reported more self-blame at the time of the abuse and currently. The only factor that predicted revictimization in this study was the number of maladaptive coping strategies used. Implications of these findings are discussed.


Journal of Interpersonal Violence | 2001

Correlates of Formal and Informal Support Seeking in Sexual Assault Victims

Sarah E. Ullman; Henrietta H. Filipas

Correlates of service seeking were examined in a sample of 323 sexual assault victims. Several barriers to disclosure to different formal support providers were explored to determine whether victim characteristics, assault variables, and postassault experiences differentiated those women who sought formal assistance from those seeking informal support only. As expected, victims of stranger rapes with more injury were more likely to seek support from formal service providers. Victims seeking formal assistance reported receiving more negative social reactions when disclosing their assaults than victims soliciting support from informal social network members only. Frequency of receipt of positive social reactions did not differ as a function of disclosing to formal support providers or informal sources only, with the exception of tangible aid, which was more commonly provided by formal support sources. Implications for encouraging help seeking by victims and reducing negative social reactions of formal support providers are given.


Journal of Child Sexual Abuse | 2009

Child sexual abuse, post-traumatic stress disorder, and substance use: predictors of revictimization in adult sexual assault survivors

Sarah E. Ullman; Cynthia J. Najdowski; Henrietta H. Filipas

This study examined the unique effects of child sexual abuse simultaneously with post-traumatic stress disorder symptom clusters, problem drinking, and illicit drug use in relation to sexual revictimization in a community sample of female adult sexual assault victims. Participants (N = 555) completed two surveys a year apart. Child sexual abuse predicted more post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms in adult sexual assault victims. Post-traumatic stress disorder numbing symptoms directly predicted revictimization, whereas other post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms (reexperiencing, avoidance, and arousal) were related to problem drinking, which in turn predicted revictimization. Thus, numbing symptoms and problem drinking may be independent risk factors for sexual revictimization in adult sexual assault victims, particularly for women with a history of childhood sexual abuse.


Violence & Victims | 2005

Correlates of women's sexual assault disclosure to informal and formal support sources

Laura L. Starzynski; Sarah E. Ullman; Henrietta H. Filipas; Stephanie M. Townsend

Deciding which people to tell about sexual assault is an important and potentially consequential decision for sexual assault survivors. Women typically receive many different positive and negative reactions when they disclose sexual assault to social support sources. A diverse sample of adult sexual assault survivors in the Chicago area was surveyed about sexual assault experiences, social reactions received when disclosing assault to others, attributions of blame, coping strategies, and PTSD. Analyses were run to identify demographic, assault, and postassault factors differentiating women disclosing to informal support sources only from those disclosing to both informal and formal support sources. Women disclosing to both formal and informal support sources experienced more stereotypical assaults, had more PTSD symptoms, engaged in less behavioral self-blame, and received more negative social reactions than those disclosing to informal support sources only. Implications for future research and intervention are discussed.


Journal of Interpersonal Violence | 2006

The Role of Victim-Offender Relationship in Women’s Sexual Assault Experiences

Sarah E. Ullman; Henrietta H. Filipas; Stephanie M. Townsend; Laura L. Starzynski

This study’s goal is to identify differences in background, assault, and postassault factors according to the victim-offender relationship. A mail survey is conducted with more than 1,000 female sexual assault survivors (response rate 90%) recruited from college, community, and mental health agency sources. Stranger assailants are associated with a greater victim perceived life threat, more severe sexual assaults, and ethnic minority victims. Positive social reactions do not vary according to the victim-offender relationship, but stranger victims report more negative social reactions from others than do victims of acquaintances or romantic partners. Assaults by strangers and relatives are associated with more posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms than assaults by acquaintances and romantic partners. As expected, survivors’ social cognitive responses to rape and social reactions from support providers are stronger correlates of PTSD symptoms than demographic or assault characteristics in general, but correlates vary across victim-offender relationship groups.


Mental Health, Religion & Culture | 2008

The relationship between ethnicity, Christian orthodoxy, and mental health

Brandon Randolph-Seng; Michael Nielsen; Bette L. Bottoms; Henrietta H. Filipas

Although researchers have noted differences in the role of religiosity in the lives of people from different ethnic backgrounds, the components of religions influence (i.e., membership and orthodoxy) on mental health have not been previously examined. In the current study, Christian participants’ Christian Orthodox Scale (COS) scores were used to predict scores on mental health. As hypothesized, African Americans with higher COS scores exhibited fewer mental-health problems than did all ethnicities studied with lower COS scores. Implications and future directions for understanding the cultural influence of religion on African Americans are discussed.


Child Abuse & Neglect | 2005

Gender differences in social reactions to abuse disclosures, post-abuse coping, and PTSD of child sexual abuse survivors

Sarah E. Ullman; Henrietta H. Filipas


Psychology of Women Quarterly | 2007

Structural Models of the Relations of Assault Severity, Social Support, Avoidance Coping, Self-Blame, and PTSD among Sexual Assault Survivors.

Sarah E. Ullman; Stephanie M. Townsend; Henrietta H. Filipas; Laura L. Starzynski


Violence & Victims | 2001

Social reactions to sexual assault victims from various support sources.

Henrietta H. Filipas; Sarah E. Ullman

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Sarah E. Ullman

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Laura L. Starzynski

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Stephanie M. Townsend

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Bette L. Bottoms

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Cynthia J. Najdowski

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Michael Nielsen

Georgia Southern University

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