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An estimated 905,000 children in the US
were victims of child abuse or maltreatment in 2006 (USDHHS-ACF,
2008). While physical injuries may or may not be immediately
visible, abuse and neglect can have consequences for children,
families, and society that last lifetimes, if not generations.
The impact of child abuse and neglect is
often discussed in terms of physical, psychological, behavioral,
and societal consequences. In reality, however, it is impossible
to separate them completely. Physical consequences (such as
damage to a child's growing brain) can have psychological
implications (cognitive delays or emotional difficulties,
for example). Psychological problems often manifest as high-risk
behaviors. Depression and anxiety, for example, may make a
person more likely to smoke, abuse alcohol or illicit drugs,
or overeat. High-risk behaviors, in turn, can lead to long-term
physical health problems such as sexually transmitted diseases,
cancer, and obesity. In additional to the human consequences,
all of these consequences also have an economic impact on
a society.
Not all abused and neglected children will
experience long-term consequences. Outcomes of individual
cases vary widely and are affected by a combination of factors,
including (CWIG, 2008; CDC, 2007a, CDC, 2007b):
- The child's age and developmental status when the abuse
or neglect occurred
- The type of abuse (physical abuse, neglect, sexual abuse,
etc.)
- Frequency, duration, and severity of abuse
- Relationship between the child victim and the abuser.
Physical Health Consequences
The immediate physical effects of abuse or neglect can vary
greatly; the effects may be relatively minor (bruises or cuts)
or severe (broken bones, hemorrhage, or even death). In some
cases the physical effects are temporary; however, the pain
and suffering they cause a child should never be discounted.
The long-term impact of child abuse and neglect on physical
health is just beginning to be explored. Below are some outcomes
researchers have identified (USDHHS-ACF, 2010; CWIG, 2008):
- Shaken baby syndrome. The immediate effects of
shaking a baby (a common form of child abuse in infants)
can include vomiting, concussion, respiratory distress,
seizures, and death. Long-term consequences can include
blindness, learning disabilities, mental retardation, cerebral
palsy, or paralysis.
- Impaired brain development. Child abuse and neglect
have been shown, in some cases, to cause important regions
of the brain to fail to form properly, resulting in impaired
physical, mental, and emotional development. In other cases,
the stress of chronic abuse causes a "hyperarousal" response
by certain areas of the brain, which may result in hyperactivity,
sleep disturbances, and anxiety, as well as increased vulnerability
to post-traumatic stress disorder, attention deficit/hyperactivity
disorder, conduct disorder, and learning and memory difficulties.
- Poor physical health. A study of 700 children
who had been in foster care for 1 year found more than one-quarter
of the children had some kind of recurring physical or mental
health problem (National Survey of Child and Adolescent
Well-Being). A study of 9,500 HMO participants showed a
relationship between various forms of household dysfunction
(including childhood abuse) and long-term health problems
such as sexually transmitted diseases, heart disease, cancer,
chronic lung disease, skeletal fractures, and liver disease.
- Death
Psychological Consequences
The immediate emotional effects of abuse and neglect-isolation,
fear, and an inability to trust-can translate into lifelong
consequences including low self-esteem, depression, and relationship
difficulties. Researchers have identified links between child
abuse and neglect and the following (USDHHS-ACF, 2010; CWIG,
2008):
- Poor mental and emotional health. In one long-term
study, as many as 80 percent of young adults who had been
abused met the diagnostic criteria for at least one psychiatric
disorder at age 21. These young adults exhibited many problems,
including depression, anxiety, eating disorders, and suicide
attempts. Other psychological and emotional conditions associated
with abuse and neglect include panic disorder, dissociative
disorders, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, post-traumatic
stress disorder, and reactive attachment disorder.
- Cognitive difficulties. The National Survey of
Child and Adolescent Well-Being recently found children
placed in out-of-home care due to abuse or neglect tended
to score lower than the general population on measures of
cognitive capacity, language development, and academic achievement.
- Social difficulties. Children who are abused and
neglected by caretakers often do not form secure attachments
to them. These early attachment difficulties can lead to
later difficulties in relationships with other adults as
well as with peers.
Behavioral Consequences
Not all victims of child abuse and neglect will experience
behavioral consequences; however, child abuse and neglect
appear to make the following more likely (USDHHS-ACF, 2010;
CWIG, 2008):
- Difficulties during adolescence. Studies have found
abused and neglected children to be at least 25 percent
more likely to experience problems such as delinquency,
teen pregnancy, low academic achievement, drug use, and
mental health problems.
- Juvenile delinquency and adult criminality. A
National Institute of Justice study indicated being abused
or neglected as a child increased the likelihood of arrest
as a juvenile by 59 percent. Abuse and neglect increased
the likelihood of adult criminal behavior by 28 percent
and violent crime by 30 percent.
- Alcohol and other drug abuse. Research consistently
reflects an increased likelihood that abused and neglected
children will smoke cigarettes, abuse alcohol, or take illicit
drugs. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse,
as many as two-thirds of people in drug treatment programs
reported being abused as children (2000).
- Abusive behavior. Abusive parents often have experienced
abuse during their own childhoods. It is estimated approximately
one-third of abused and neglected children will eventually
victimize their own children (PCA-NY, nd).
Societal Consequences
While child abuse and neglect almost always occur within
the family, the impact does not end there. Society as a whole
pays a price for child abuse and neglect, in terms of both
direct and indirect costs (USDHHS-ACF, 2010; CWIG, 2008).
- Direct costs. Direct costs include those associated
with maintaining a child welfare system to investigate allegations
of child abuse and neglect, as well as expenditures by the
judicial, law enforcement, health, and mental health systems
to respond to and treat abused children and their families.
A 2001 report by Prevent Child Abuse America estimates these
costs at $24 billion per year.
- Indirect costs. Indirect costs represent the long-term
economic consequences of child abuse and neglect. These
include juvenile and adult criminal activity, mental illness,
substance abuse, and domestic violence. They can also include
loss of productivity due to unemployment and underemployment,
the cost of special education services, and increased use
of the health care system. Prevent Child Abuse America recently
estimated these costs at more than $69 billion per year
(2001).
According to Prevent Child Abuse Iowa (2008), reporting on
the second study completed by Prevent Child Abuse America,
the economic cost of child abuse was estimated to be 103.8
billion dollars in 2007. This estimation is considered to
be conservative, as it focuses only on the direct costs of
hospitalized abused children. There are many costs associated
with child abuse and many children's victimization did not
result in hospitalization. Additionally, the vast amount of
pain and suffering and other intangible costs have not been
factored into the above dollar amount).
This report estimates that the U.S. spends more than $33.1
billion annually on the direct effects of child abuse. The
largest cost was for the child welfare system: $25.4 billion
a year. Other direct costs included hospitalization/treatment
of injuries ($6.6 billion), mental health care ($1.1 billion),
and law enforcement interventions ($33.3 million).
The report also projects the indirect or long-term effects
of abuse. According to Prevent Child Abuse America, the amount
spent annually treating all of the long-term, indirect effects
of child abuse, including special education, mental and physical
health care, juvenile delinquency, lost productivity, and
adult criminality is more than $70.7 billion.
Continue to Perpetrators
of Child Abuse
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