...the National Survey of Adolescents and Implications for Secondary Prevention /
Stevens, Tomika N. et al
Child Maltreatment. Vol 10, Issue 3, 2005. pp. 211-233
"The authors examined variables differentiating singly and multiply victimized youth with a national household probability sample of 4,023 adolescents. For boys, heightened risk of multiple victimization was associated with family alcohol problems, Native American race, and earlier age at assault onset. For girls, increased multiple victimization risk was associated with family alcohol problems, older current age, and several characteristics of the initial assault episode—earlier age at onset, acquaintance perpetrator, chronicity, perceived life threat, and injury." (Full text available from CSA.)