Spotlight
Court of Protection Practice 2025
'Court of Protection Practice goes from strength to strength, having...
Jackson's Matrimonial Finance Tenth Edition
Jackson's Matrimonial Finance is an authoritative specialist text...
Spotlight
Latest articlesrss feeds
LexisNexis Family Law Awards 2025: entries now open – as well as sponsorship opportunities too!
Celebrating the excellence, resilience, and humanity at the heart of family law.The LexisNexis Family Law Awards 2025 are officially open for entries – and with them, a unique opportunity for...
AlphaBiolabs: Bridging the gap – when a hair drug test is not enough
***SPONSORED CONTENT***Marie Law, Head of Toxicology at AlphaBiolabs, discusses the many benefits of oral fluid drug testing for child welfare and protection matters.Drug testing plays a crucial role...
‘Do they have to know about that?’ Human rights considerations and disclosure
Simon Johnson, Pump Court ChambersThis article examines the difficult and often emotive issue of disclosure of highly personal information about one party to other parties within public law...
Cases of parental death before protective measures – are affirmation of the Children Act’s adaptability?
Avaia Williams, Parklane PlowdenTwo recent family court decisions explore whether the statutory threshold under the Children Act 1989 can be met when parental harm occurs before a child’s birth or...
Supporting and questioning neurodivergent parties in Family Court proceedings
Frances Harris, Harcourt ChambersHelen Little, Harcourt ChambersReflecting on the recent Family Justice Council guidelines on Neurodiversity in the Family Justice System for Practitioners, this...
View all articles
Authors

One in 10 children may be abused, research shows

Sep 29, 2018, 17:46 PM
Title : One in 10 children may be abused, research shows
Slug : one-in-10-children-may-be-abused-research-shows
Meta Keywords :
Canonical URL :
Trending Article : No
Prioritise In Trending Articles : No
Check Copyright Text : No
Date : Dec 3, 2008, 07:46 AM
Article ID : 90549

One in 10 children may be suffering from abuse in the developed world, according to a series of studies on child abuse published in the Lancet medical journal.

The authors from British and American universities warn that child abuse is much more widespread than indicated by official child protection statistics.

Professor Ruth Gilbert of University College London said that, based on a number of academic studies in which adults were asked about whether they had been abused, and parents about their own disciplinary methods, it was estimated that a tenth of children had experienced abuse.

The definition of abuse included punching, hitting, beating, burning, rape, exposure to pornography as well as neglect and emotional abuse such as making a child feel worthless or unwanted.

Maltreated children are at increased risk of perpetrating crime and violence as adults, thereby perpetuating the cycle of violence at considerable cost to themselves, their families and wider society," Professor Gilbert wrote.

Her study estimates that at least 15% of girls and 5% of boys have been exposed to sexual abuse of some kind by the age of 18, and that 5-10% of girls and 1-5% of boys are exposed to penetrative sexual abuse.

The authors are concerned that too many instances of child abuse go unreported as people fear being accused of breaking up families.

Professor Gilbert said: "Scarce reporting to child-protection agencies is a cause for concern, and we need to find out whether maltreatment is being recognised and dealt with in other ways."

The study calls for better cooperation among doctors, schools and child service agencies and increasing the use of telephone helplines and confidential counselling.

The authors conclude: "Child maltreatment is common, and for many it is a chronic condition, with repeated and ongoing maltreatment merging into adverse outcomes throughout childhood and into adulthood... More attention needs to be given to neglected children. There is mounting evidence that the consequences of childhood neglect can be as damaging - or perhaps even more damaging - to a child than physical or sexual abuse."

Categories :
  • News
Tags :
Authors
Provider :
Product Bucket :
Recommend These Products
Related Articles