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Recent US Statistics
on the gender of child abuse perpetrators challenges
myths:
- Gender: --- 59.3% female; 40.7% male.
- Median Age: --- 31 years for females and
34 years for males. 42.3% of female perpetrators were
under 30 years old, vs. 31.9% of male perpetrators.
- Relationship to Child: --- 80.9% of abuse/neglect
was perpetrated by a child's parent; mothers were more
than twice as likely as fathers to be the sole perpetrators
(40.5% vs. 17.7%).
http://www.child-protection.org/CPTtext/tProviders/tProblem.htm
The
Problem of Child Abuse.
The Problem of Child Abuse Child
abuse is a major public health concern that transcends
racial, ethnic, religious, and socio-economic boundaries.
It has been correlated with problems of violence, substance
abuse, anxiety disorders, depression, suicide, and other
psychopathology. Studies suggest that the incidence
of certain co-morbidities are correlated with duration
and severity of abuse, thus suggesting that reports
of abuse to appropriate child protection agencies may
have long term, as well as immediate, health benefits
for the victim. Thus, it is essential that paediatricians
and other healthcare providers understand the scope
of the problem and how to identify cases of abuse and
neglect, as well as families at risk. Here we outline
the scope of the problem.
Definitions [Click
to follow Web Resource links]
Descriptions
Statistics
Definitions:
The Federal Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment
Act (Pub. L. No. 93-247 (1974)) defines child abuse
and neglect to be, at a minimum:
- Any recent act or failure to act on the part of
a parent or caretaker, which results in death, serious
physical or emotional harm, sexual abuse, or exploitation,
or an act or failure to act which presents an imminent
risk of serious harm.
The definition of sexual abuse includes the following:
- The employment, use, persuasion, inducement, enticement,
or coercion of any child to engage in, or to assist
any other person to engage in, any sexually explicit
conduct or simulation of such conduct for the purpose
of producing a visual depiction of such conduct; or
- The rape, and in cases of caretaker or inter-familial
relationships, statutory rape, molestation, prostitution,
or other form of sexual exploitation of children, or
incest with children.
A child is defined to be a person who has not attained
the lesser of:
- The age of 18; or - Except in cases of sexual abuse,
the age specified by the child protection law of the
State in which the child resides.(1)
Each State may further define child abuse and neglect,
provided the definitions fall within the minimum standard
set by CAPTA. Massachusetts reporting laws define child
abuse and neglect as follows (reporting laws for other
States can be found here):
"Injured, Abused, or Neglected Child"
means a child under the age of eighteen years who is
suffering physical or emotional injury resulting from
abuse inflicted upon him which causes harm or substantial
risk of harm to the child's health or welfare including
sexual abuse, or from neglect, including malnutrition,
or who is determined to be physically dependent upon
an addictive drug at birth.
"Abuse" can be defined as the occurrence
of one or more of the following acts between a parent
[or primary caretaker] and the other parent or between
a parent and child:
- Attempting to cause or causing bodily injury; or
- Placing another in reasonable fear of imminent bodily
injury.
"Serious incident of abuse" means
the occurrence of one or more of the following acts
between a parent [or primary caretaker] and the other
parent or between a parent and child:
- Attempting to cause or causing serious bodily injury;
- Placing another in reasonable fear of imminent
serious bodily injury; or - Causing another to engage
involuntarily in sexual relations by force, threat or
duress.(1)
Top Descriptions:
Most of the following descriptions are adapted from
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services guide,
"A Coordinated Response to Child Abuse and Neglect:
A Basic Manual."(2)
- Physical Abuse: characterized
by physical injury (i.e. bruises and fractures)
resulting from punching, beating, kicking, biting,
burning, or otherwise harming a child. Although
the injury is not an accident, the parent or caretaker
may not have intended to hurt the child. The injury
may have resulted from overdiscipline or physical
punishment that is inappropriate for the child's
age or condition. The injury may be a result of
a single episode or of repeated episodes and can
range in severity from minor bruising to death.
Any punishment that involves hitting with a closed
fist or an instrument, kicking, inflicting burns,
or throwing the child is considered physical abuse
regardless of the severity of the injury sustained.
- Sexual Abuse: includes
a wide range of behavior - fondling a child's genitals,
oral-genital contact, intercourse, rape, sodomy,
forcing a child to perform a sexual act on an adult,
exhibitionism, and commercial exploitation through
prostitution or the production of pornographic materials.
Sexual abuse is usually defined as acts committed
by a person responsible for the care of the child
(i.e. a parent, babysitter, day care provider, etc.),
whereas sexual assault is usually defined as acts
committed by a person not responsible for the child's
care.
- Emotional/Psychological
Abuse: includes acts or omissions by the parents
or other persons responsible for the child's care
that have caused, or could cause, serious behavioral,
cognitive, emotional, or mental disorders. In some
cases, the acts alone (without any harm evident
in the child's behavior or condition) warrant Department
of Social Services (DSS) intervention; for example,
the use of extreme or bizarre forms of punishment,
such as torture or confinement in a dark closet.
For less severe acts, such as habitual scapegoating,
belittling, or rejecting treatment, demonstrable
harm to the child is often required for DSS to intervene.
- Physical Neglect:
includes refusal of or delay in seeking health care,
abandonment, inadequate supervision, and expulsion
from home or refusing to allow a runaway to return
home.
- Emotional Neglect:
includes such actions as chronic or extreme spouse
abuse in the child's presence, permission of drug
or alcohol use by the child, and refusal or failure
to provide needed psychological care.
- Educational Neglect:
includes permission of chronic truancy, failure
to enroll a child of mandatory school age, and inattention
to a special education need.
- Munchausen Syndrome
by Proxy: a form of child abuse in which a parent
(usually the mother) purposefully fabricates illness
in her child or reports concerning symptoms (such
as seizure activity, apnea, etc.) not seen by objective
witnesses, and repeatedly seeks medical care for
the child, denying knowledge as to the cause of
the illness or injury. Acute signs and symptoms
often subside when child and parent are separated.(3)
For more detailed descriptions, please see Injuries
and Behaviours Indicative of Abuse.
Top Statistics:
The National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System
(NCANDS)(4) reported the following statistics for the
calendar year 2001:
Incidence:
An estimated 903,000 (12.4 per 1,000) children in
the United States were victims of child maltreatment
in the year 2001. These numbers increased slightly from
the year 2000, when an estimated 879,000 (12.2 per 1,000)
children were abused and/or neglected.
Types of Maltreatment:
Of those children maltreated,
- 57.2% suffered neglect (including medical neglect)-
18.6% were physically abused- 9.6% were victims of sexual
abuse- 6.8% suffered emotional or psychological abuse-
19.5% of cases were classified as "other"
(Percentages do not add up to 100% as many children
suffered multiple forms for maltreatment.)
Characteristics of Maltreated Children:
- Gender: 51.5%
female; 48% male; 0.5% unknown - Age: 27.7%
of victims were 3 years old or younger; approximately
75% were younger than 12 years old.
- Race: 50.2%
Caucasian; 25.0% African American; 14.5% Latino;
2.0% American Indian or Alaska Native; 1.3% Asian-Pacific
Islanders.
Fatalities:
There were an estimated 1,300 child fatalities (1.8
per 1,000 children) secondary to maltreatment in 2001;
neglect accounted for the largest percentage of these
deaths (35.6%). 40.9% of fatalities were in children
less than 1 year old and 84.5% were in children under
6 years old. Approximately 1.5% of these fatalities
occurred in foster care.
Reports and Services:
There were approximately 3 million referrals to child
protection and social services agencies, regarding approximately
5 million children. 67.3% of these referrals were screened
in (investigated). Preventative services were provided
to approximately 2 million children. 58.4% of these
children were victims of alleged abuse or neglect, whereas
28.8% were thought to not have suffered maltreatment
after investigation. 19.0% of victims and 4.7% of non-victims
were removed from their homes as the result of the investigation.
Court actions were initiated for 17.5% of victims.
Characteristics of Perpetrators:
- Gender: 59.3%
female; 40.7% male.
- Median Age: 31 years for females and
34 years for males. 42.3% of female perpetrators were
under 30 years old, vs. 31.9% of male perpetrators.
- Relationship to Child: 80.9% of abuse/neglect was
perpetrated by a child's parent; mothers were more than
twice as likely as fathers to be the sole perpetrators
(40.5% vs. 17.7%).
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References:
(1) National Clearinghouse on Child Abuse and Neglect
Information.(December 31, 2000). Child Abuse and Neglect
State Statutes Elements: Reporting Laws Number 1. Washington,
DC: US Department of Health and Human Services.
(2) National Clearinghouse on Child Abuse and Neglect
Information. (1992). A Coordinated Response to Child
Abuse and Neglect: A Basic Manual. Washington, DC: US
Department of Health and Human Services.
(3) Child Neglect and Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy.
Portable Guides to Investigating Child Abuse. US Department
of Justice. 1996.
(4) National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System
(2003). Child Maltreatment 2001. Administration on Children,
Youth, and Families
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