Trauma has an echo: a mixed methods study exploring barriers to routine healthcare for survivors of sexual violence in a UK higher education setting

Objectives To explore barriers to healthcare among survivors of sexual violence (SV) and the behavioural pathways behind avoidance, focusing on survivor-led solutions.Design A mixed methods study collated qualitative interviews/surveys to explore the lived experiences of survivors of SV. Data were a...

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Main Authors: Jane Meyrick, Laura Hooper
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2025-05-01
Series:BMJ Open
Online Access:https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/15/5/e102181.full
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author Jane Meyrick
Laura Hooper
author_facet Jane Meyrick
Laura Hooper
author_sort Jane Meyrick
collection DOAJ
description Objectives To explore barriers to healthcare among survivors of sexual violence (SV) and the behavioural pathways behind avoidance, focusing on survivor-led solutions.Design A mixed methods study collated qualitative interviews/surveys to explore the lived experiences of survivors of SV. Data were analysed using both quantitative descriptors and qualitative thematic analysis to expand the mechanisms/solutions to reported rates.Setting Higher education setting in the UK.Participants Forty-two survivors of SV between the ages of 18 and 29 self-identified as female (36), male (4), genderfluid (1) and non-binary transmasculine (1), with 10 describing themselves as being from racially minoritised communities and 32 as White survivors.Results Analysis found 86% of survivors completely or significantly avoided healthcare, particularly sexual and reproductive services. Three themes were identified: (1) wider societal blame/marginalisation of survivors hindered their ability to access care in what felt like ‘a system of oppression’; (2) once past these barriers, direct experiences with professionals replicated trauma, exacerbating avoidance and health disparities through ‘healthcare-induced re-traumatisation’; (3) survivors identified what they needed to re-engage in healthcare including trauma-informed professionals and compassionate services with ‘survivor-centred care’.Conclusions SV may deepen health inequalities as survivors avoid healthcare. Survivor-led reforms called for survivor-centred practices and encouraged systemic reflection on how healthcare systems may contribute to the broader marginalisation of survivors. Findings echo policy recommendations for co-produced services led by minoritised/marginalised patients and operationalise trauma-informed training for healthcare professionals. Additionally, access-focused psychological support could reduce the impact of sexual trauma on morbidity and mortality.
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spelling doaj-art-a3f8af6d46d540ad9672604e36baf3d02025-08-20T03:47:33ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open2044-60552025-05-0115510.1136/bmjopen-2025-102181Trauma has an echo: a mixed methods study exploring barriers to routine healthcare for survivors of sexual violence in a UK higher education settingJane Meyrick0Laura Hooper1College of Health, Science and Society, University of the West of England, Bristol, UKCollege of Health, Science and Society, University of the West of England, Bristol, UKObjectives To explore barriers to healthcare among survivors of sexual violence (SV) and the behavioural pathways behind avoidance, focusing on survivor-led solutions.Design A mixed methods study collated qualitative interviews/surveys to explore the lived experiences of survivors of SV. Data were analysed using both quantitative descriptors and qualitative thematic analysis to expand the mechanisms/solutions to reported rates.Setting Higher education setting in the UK.Participants Forty-two survivors of SV between the ages of 18 and 29 self-identified as female (36), male (4), genderfluid (1) and non-binary transmasculine (1), with 10 describing themselves as being from racially minoritised communities and 32 as White survivors.Results Analysis found 86% of survivors completely or significantly avoided healthcare, particularly sexual and reproductive services. Three themes were identified: (1) wider societal blame/marginalisation of survivors hindered their ability to access care in what felt like ‘a system of oppression’; (2) once past these barriers, direct experiences with professionals replicated trauma, exacerbating avoidance and health disparities through ‘healthcare-induced re-traumatisation’; (3) survivors identified what they needed to re-engage in healthcare including trauma-informed professionals and compassionate services with ‘survivor-centred care’.Conclusions SV may deepen health inequalities as survivors avoid healthcare. Survivor-led reforms called for survivor-centred practices and encouraged systemic reflection on how healthcare systems may contribute to the broader marginalisation of survivors. Findings echo policy recommendations for co-produced services led by minoritised/marginalised patients and operationalise trauma-informed training for healthcare professionals. Additionally, access-focused psychological support could reduce the impact of sexual trauma on morbidity and mortality.https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/15/5/e102181.full
spellingShingle Jane Meyrick
Laura Hooper
Trauma has an echo: a mixed methods study exploring barriers to routine healthcare for survivors of sexual violence in a UK higher education setting
BMJ Open
title Trauma has an echo: a mixed methods study exploring barriers to routine healthcare for survivors of sexual violence in a UK higher education setting
title_full Trauma has an echo: a mixed methods study exploring barriers to routine healthcare for survivors of sexual violence in a UK higher education setting
title_fullStr Trauma has an echo: a mixed methods study exploring barriers to routine healthcare for survivors of sexual violence in a UK higher education setting
title_full_unstemmed Trauma has an echo: a mixed methods study exploring barriers to routine healthcare for survivors of sexual violence in a UK higher education setting
title_short Trauma has an echo: a mixed methods study exploring barriers to routine healthcare for survivors of sexual violence in a UK higher education setting
title_sort trauma has an echo a mixed methods study exploring barriers to routine healthcare for survivors of sexual violence in a uk higher education setting
url https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/15/5/e102181.full
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