Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Child Abuse Facts & Statistics

ncvc.org;
National Center for Victims of Crime December 12, 2006 <http://www.ncvc.org/ncvc/main.aspx?dbName=DocumentViewer&DocumentID=38709>

CHILD MALTREATMENT

  • Child protective services across the country found an estimated 896,000 children to be victims of maltreatment (neglect or abuse).8
  • Sixty-one percent of child maltreatment victims suffered neglect; 19 percent were physically abused; 10 percent were sexually abused; and 7 percent were emotionally or psychologically maltreated. In addition, 18.9 percent of victims experienced "other" types of maltreatment such as "abandonment," "threats of harm to the child," and "congenital drug addiction."9
  • Fifty-two percent of child maltreatment victims were girls and 48 percent were boys.10
  • More than one-half of all child victims were white (54 percent); one-quarter (26 percent) were African-American; and one-tenth (11 percent) were Hispanic. American Indians or Alaska Natives accounted for 2 percent of victims, and Asian-Pacific Islanders accounted for 1 percent of victims.11
  • Approximately 40 percent of child victims were maltreated solely by their mothers; another 19 percent were maltreated solely by their fathers; 18 percent were abused by both parents. Child victims abused by a non-parental perpetrator accounted for 13 percent of the total.12
  • The youngest children (from birth through age 3) were the most likely to experience recurring maltreatment.13
  • Children abused by someone other than a parent were 16 percent less likely to experience recurrence than children who were abused by their mother.14
  • Victimization rates are inversely proportional to the age of the child--the older the child, the less likely he or she is to be maltreated.15
  • In 2002, an estimated 1,400 children died due to child abuse or neglect.16
  • Five percent of child molesters released from prison commit a new sex offense within three years of their release.17
  • Twenty-nine children were murdered by their babysitters in 2003.18
  • Victims of child abuse comprised 21 percent of the recipients of crime victim compensation in 2003.19
  • The most significant predictor of whether a battered woman will physically abuse her child is having been physically abused by her own mother-not being battered by her partner.20

My Notes

  • 896,000 children maltreated is way to many.
  • Children do not deserve to be mistreated and they do not deserve to lose trust in their elders.
  • Only 13% of these accounts were committed by non-parental figures. This should say something about our society today. families abusing their children? In my mind that is one of the most disturbing issues in our country.
  • Children from birth to age 3 are most likely to experience recurring maltreatment. This is even worse because those children grow up knowing nothing but abuse.
  • Due to age, the older the child is the less likely they are to be maltreated.
  • Just in the year 2002, 1,400 children died from abuse. That was 4 years ago and now the rates are more than likely a lot higher.
  • In 2003 29 children were murdered...by their baby-sitters. I bet that is a disturbing thought for parents. Imagine coming home from a night out with your husband or wife and finding your child dead and later finding out your baby-sitter did it. I wouldn't ever leave the house without my children again.

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

What I Know & What I Want To Know

Abuse? It's a complete mystery to me I will never understand why in the world people feel that abuse will solve things. I have been through many parts of abuse and I have observed it. Abuse to me is just someones excuse for having an overactive temper. People who have abused more than likely were somehow abused in their families as children. Whether that means physical, emotional, mental, or sexual abuse. Don't get me wrong I do believe that some people who become abusers have never experienced it themselves, but for the majority in my opinion I think they have mostly been abused in some way shape or form. The things I have experienced have made em a stronger willed person and i feel as if the things people have done to me have made me a better person and it has opened my eyes to more things.
I'd like to know if there's a waver in brain functions while people are abusing others.
What motivates them to hurt people?
What motivates them to forced themselves upon others?
Do they get enjoyment out of these things?
Do they believe that if this is how they work, they won't ever be hurt?
Do they feel trapped inside themselves so they turn away everyone else?
Honestly, I want to know all about the abuser..because I have been the abused...
I know how it is from the victims side, but how is it from the abusers side?