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What is Child Abuse?

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By Patty Inglish, MS


Definitions and Signs

I have worked with programs designed to prevent child abuse and other forms of abuse for all ages and genders for over 20 years and will list some signs and indications of abuse here.

But first, to answer your question quickly, if a child is left outside without supervision or protection for an hour and becomes extremely sunburned, insect-bitten, attacked by animals, or frostbitten and was not of an age to help himself, then it is legally considered child abuse.

In some Scandinavian countries, babies are set out on the front porch in their strollers, dressed in snowsuits, scarves, hats, gloves, socks and boots, and covered with a wool blanket and left for awhile with the parents in the house, in order to breathe cold air in the fall and winter. It is their customer. However, this was done by an immigrant family in Ohio several years ago and the police knocked on heir door and asked them what they thought they were doing. The incident ended up in the newspaper and the family maintained that there was nothing wrong with it, but the police told them not to do it again. I don't know the end result.

In my state, if the child is older than an elementary school age of about 10 or 11, county child services agencies will often not intervene unless the child is being used as a postitute or being photographed in child pornography.

I was involved in performing a crackdown on child pornography several years ago among some irreputable martial arts instructors that my task force was able to stop. The work continues.


US Department of Health and Human Services

Child Abuse Statistics for 2005

The Child Victims.

899,000 children in the 50 States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico were victims of abuse or neglect.

The increase of approximately 20,000 victims in 2005 over 2004, is largely due to the addition of data from Alaska and Puerto for the firs time.

  • Children age birth to 3 years had the highest rate of victimization at 16.5 per 1,000 children;
  • Over one-half of the victims were 7 years old or younger;
  • A little over one-half of the child victims were girls;
  • Approximately one-half of the victims were White; one-quarter African-American; and 17.4% Hispanic.

The Types of Abuse Reported

  • Over 60 percent (62.8%) of child victims suffered neglect;
  • 16.6% of the victims suffered physical abuse;
  • About 10% of the victims suffered sexual abuse;
  • Less than 10 percent of the victims suffered emotional abuse.

How Many Children Died in 2005 from Abuse?

  • 1,460 children died from child abuse (or neglect);
  • The national rate of child deaths from abuse was about 2 deaths per 100,000 children;
  • Over 40 percent (42.2%) of child deaths were from to neglect; physical abuse also was a major cause of child fatalities;
  • Over three-quarters (76.6%) of the children who died due to child abuse and neglect were younger than 4 years old;
  • Infant boys under 1 year had the highest rate of abuse fatalities at 1.7 per 100,000 children.

Child Neglect - a Form of Abuse

Signs of Neglect

Physical Signs

  • Poor hygiene.
  • Bed sores and other skin lesions.
  • Squinting.
  • Missing clothing - no underwear or socks. No coat in winter.
  • Untreated injury or illness.
  • No immunizations.
  • Prolonged exposure to the elements, as in excessive sunburn, insect bites, colds, frostbite.
  • Height and weight significantly below average.

Behavioral Signs

  • School attendance is spotty.
  • Chronic hunger.
  • Tired all the time.
  • Begging for leftovers.
  • Taking on adult responsibilities.
  • Reporting no parent is at home or no food is in the house.

Emotional Abuse

Signs of Emotional Abuse

Physical Signs

  • Eating disorders.
  • Constipation.
  • Strange skin color - pale, sallow, greenish.
  • Speech disorders like stuttering.
  • Developmental delay in speech or motor skills.
  • Weight or height below average.
  • Flat places or bald spots on the head.
  • Nervous disorders like rashes, tics, ulcers.

Behavioral Signs:

  • Habits like biting, head-bagging, jabbering, rocking.
  • Cruel behavior toward animals and younger children.
  • Bedwetting.
  • Mood swings.
  • Loss of speech ability.

Florida's Goals

Physical Abuse

Signs of Physical Abuse

Physical Signs

  • Arm or leg joint at odd angles, suggesting dislocation or fracture without treatment.
  • Patches of missing hair, suggesting being pulled or dragged by the hair.
  • Unexplained bruises or raised welts on scalp, face, throat, upper arms, buttocks, thighs or lower back - or anywhere -- in unusual patterns or shapes that look like belt buckle, electric cord, hand print, etc. on an infant in various stages of healing. A child might disappear from school for a few days and return with bruises.
  • Unexplained burns, especially on the palms, soles of the feet, abdomen, buttocks. Hot water immersion burns from the toes to up above the ankles or form the fingers up to the elbow, where the arm or leg has been held down in scalding water. Any burns on buttocks or genitals. burns over the face and upper body where scaling water has been thrown onto the child.
  • Rope burns or burns from electrical cord or curtain cord tie-up. Raw skin around the mouth from duct tape.
  • Infected burns from lack of treatment.

Behaviors

  • Behavioral extremes -- withdrawal, aggression, regression to babyish behaviors, depression, histrionics.
  • Inappropriate fear of parent, caretaker, relative, neighbor.
  • Antisocial behaviors -- substance abuse, truancy, fear of going home, promiscuity, fire setting, assault, property damage.
  • Unbelievable explanation for injuries.
  • Lies unusually still while continually scanning the environment.
  • Unwarranted shyness and dislike of physical touch.

Help me -- report child abuse.
Help me -- report child abuse.

Sexual Abuse

Signs of Sexual Abuse

Physical Signs

  • Ripped or stained underwear.
  • Frequent, unexplained sore throats when other family memebrs are fine.
  • Yeast and urinary infections.
  • Physical complaints - pain, genital irritation, vomiting.
  • Sexually transmitted diseases.
  • Bruises or bleeding of the genitals or anus.
  • Pregnancy.

Behavioral Signs

  • Regression to bedwetting, thumb-sucking, fear of the dark or the bathroom.
  • Constipation.
  • Promiscuity.
  • Seductive behaviors.
  • Nightmares and insomnia.
  • HIding in closets or behind draperies.
  • Age-inappropriate knowledge of sex.
  • Refusal to undress or wearing several layers of clothing.
  • Poor grades in school.
  • Trouble walking or sitting.

Comments

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Daniel Greenfield profile image

Daniel Greenfield  says:
2 years ago

immigrant communities raise some tricky issues when it comes to children, I've had some experiences in that regard myself

some things that are done are genuinely physically abusive

but a lot of practices are simply taken the wrong way by americans, it isn't limited only to immigrants, the case of the french tourist in new york who left her stroller outside the resteurant window comes to mind

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

Thanks Daniel, that's a good observation. There are certainly a lot of misunderstandings. Another problem is that some people don't know what constitutes abusive behavior - a mother at a local rec center kept hitting her kids in the head - hard - when they didn't obey her quickly enough and she was surprised when the piolice were called. She didn;t see anything wrong with it.

Whitney05 profile image

Whitney05  says:
2 years ago

Wow! Great info. Thanks

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

You're welcome! I'll do a Hub on other abuse soon...

Mary Gold  says:
2 years ago

Most people today still do not recognize abuse or even want to admit that it exists. In some towns, the police do not want to be bothered with the paperwork when a report is made. I am a therapist and under the duty to report law, so I have to report all instances of child abuse that I encounter.

I reproted a famly several years ago for sex abuse iof children in one suburb and the police called me and threated me with a 4th degree misdemeanor until I told them I am under the duty to report. They quickly got off the phone. Three of the policemen were fired soon after, because they were driving cruisers to the high school, getting behind young girls driving home, pulling them over and forcing them to have sex after threatening the girls with jail. These three officers forced the girls to drive to their own homes, where the police followed them in and raped them. After the firings, rthe story was buried.

Abuse does exist.

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

It's an ongoing battle to overcome obstacles to educate everyone about what exactly is abuse and how to prevent it -- And to help those that have siuffered it as well as those that do it. I think abusers must be miserable - this does not excuse their behaviors, but they cannot be happy, I think.

Whitney05 profile image

Whitney05  says:
2 years ago

I wish that more could be done. Honestly. I do realize that a good is done, but I think a lot of child abuse cases slip through the cracks. :-(

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

You're right Whitney08. And after the kids are in junior high school/middle school, little is done unless they are involved as victims in child porn.

tinyteddy profile image

tinyteddy  says:
2 years ago

fantastic

Jesus_saves_us_7 profile image

Jesus_saves_us_7  says:
9 months ago

great hub. it is horrible what children go through.

Mina Lincoln profile image

Mina Lincoln  says:
3 months ago

Yes it is horrible. It WAS horrible. Thank God, I am now a SURVIVOR and also an Advocate FOR the safety, lives and Rights of Children.

Am currently working on a book dedicated to the disturbing reality of our world's broken, BREAKING children.

Somewhere, at this very moment a child is being emotionally, physically, and sexually abused. Inside this next hour a child WILL die because of this tragedy.

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
3 months ago

Thanks for all teh comments.

Mina - congratulations for doing that good work! I look forward to one day reading it.

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