An expert has cautioned that Transportation Security Administration's 'enhanced' pat-downs 'could cause re-trauma to rape victims.
An expert has cautioned that Transportation Security Administration's 'enhanced' pat-downs 'could cause re-trauma to rape victims. As the outcry grows against the new security screenings at US airports, one population may face a special burden at TSA checkpoints: victims of rape or sexual assault who are now confronted with a procedure that they feel explicitly strips them of control over their bodies.
The experience "can be extremely re-traumatizing to someone who has already experienced an invasion of their privacy and their body," the Christian Science Monitor quoted Amy Menna, a counselor and professor at the University of South Florida who has a decade's experience researching and treating rape survivors, as saying.
Menna recommends that people know their rights so that they can avoid the sense of powerlessness when going through a security check.
"Any type of violation of physical boundaries can set back a rape survivor in their treatment, in their therapy, in their recovery," said Menna.
"There's a lack of sensitivity to individuals' emotional states when undergoing this public violation," she adds, citing the dismissive brusqueness of the procedure.
Many passengers don't know - and aren't informed - that they have the right to a private screening, or to have another person present at that private screening.
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Menna also recommends appealing to the compassion of the TSA agent performing the search.
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Source-ANI