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Child-Maltreatment-Research-L (CMRL) List Serve

Browse All Past CMRL Messages

Welcome to the archive of past Child-Maltreatment-Research-L (CMRL) list serve messages (11,000+). The table below contains all past CMRL messages (text only, no attachments) from Nov. 20, 1996 - June 10, 2024 and is updated every two months.

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Message ID: 11375
Date: 2024-05-23

Author:Randi Crabtree

Subject:Re: Research on fallacy of "good touch"

Good afternoon, I am intrigued and love the idea. I don't have any literature off hand to offer, but wanted to suggest looking into Trust Based Relational Intervention (TBRI) literature. I use it in my practice with sexual abuse survivors and it focuses in on "safe" touch versus "good" touch. Rand Crabtree, PhD, LPC Crabtree Counseling PLLC On Wed, May 22, 2024, 1:37 PM Melissa Bright > wrote: Hi All - I am working on a piece and need to provide evidence for why it is important to move away from phrases like “good” and “bad” touch (because abuse may feel physically good) for the prevention of child sexual abuse. Anyone have an empirical citation for this? Melissa Bright, PhD Founder and Executive Director Center for Violence Prevention Research scienceofviolence.org | stay connected | support our work

Good afternoon, I am intrigued and love the idea. I don't have any literature off hand to offer, but wanted to suggest looking into Trust Based Relational Intervention (TBRI) literature. I use it in my practice with sexual abuse survivors and it focuses in on "safe" touch versus "good" touch. Rand Crabtree, PhD, LPC Crabtree Counseling PLLC On Wed, May 22, 2024, 1:37 PM Melissa Bright > wrote: Hi All - I am working on a piece and need to provide evidence for why it is important to move away from phrases like “good” and “bad” touch (because abuse may feel physically good) for the prevention of child sexual abuse. Anyone have an empirical citation for this? Melissa Bright, PhD Founder and Executive Director Center for Violence Prevention Research scienceofviolence.org | stay connected | support our work