Researchers from the University at Buffalo Research Institute on Addictions (RIA) found that college women who experienced severe sexual victimisation were three times more likely than their peers to experience severe sexual victimisation the following year.
They followed nearly 1,000 college women, aged 18 to 21, over a five-year period, studying their drinking habits and experiences of severe physical and sexual assault.
Severe physical victimisation includes assaults with or without a weapon. Severe sexual victimisation includes rape and attempted rape, including incapacitated rape, where a victim is too intoxicated from drugs or alcohol to provide consent.
"Instead, we found that the biggest predictor of future victimisation is not drinking, but past victimisation," said Parks.
Also Read
Colleges also must keep an eye out for long-term drinking problems with trauma victims: women who were victims showed an increase in drinking in the year following their assaults, perhaps as a coping mechanism, they said.