Fear is subjective.
Situational awareness is key.
If you do all you can to be safe (don't pull into a site you have to back out of if you can be blocked etc)... then you've done all you can do.
I survived Hurricane Andrew at ground zero. There's no such thing as safety in numbers.
I believe I am safest when I am in God's will where He wants me to be.
A couple I met at PT waiting is thinking of coming on board...going RV permanent. Prior military, he, too, has PTSD and wants to go! (I don't want to be anywhere, I just want to GO...) The wife is concerned for safety, she likes the roof over her head of a house. I reminded her she only has the impression of safety as it only takes one tornado and that house is gone.
We live in houses with alarms, locks, video cameras, gated communities, police/security patrol and guess what? When someone wants to do bad things, none of that stops them. There's only the subjective idea of safety there.
As for men being safer.... IDK... in today's world I really think there are evil people who are out to get anyone, not just women. I think what is different is the man's attitude and presentation in the situation. A woman might need to learn that but can exude it too!
I'd be more concerned about the strange disappearances in the National Parks, especially in the NW Territory.
Anyway, modern neurobiology has proven what we call "the observer effect" in that what you BELIEVE you will encounter is what you WILL encounter... the mind's thoughts are not ethereal but real entities growing in the brain and are visible on scans.... you can create with your mind!
Come on ladies.... you know how to make an entrance into a room when you want to impress! Use that same attitude when you're camping and especially if you encounter a never-do-well!
Power.