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Facts & Myths
On
this page:
How Many Children are Exposed to Violence?
What Is the Connection Between Domestic
Violence and Child Abuse?
What Are the Effects of Exposure to Violence
on Children?
What Are the Myths about Witnessing Violence?
How
Many Children are Exposed to Violence?
- A study at Boston City Hospital
(now Boston Medical Center) found that 1 in 10 children
had observed a shooting or knifing by the age of six.
- Half of the reported violence
occurred in the home and half occurred on the streets.
In Los Angeles, children witness 10-20% of homicides.
- A study of elementary school
children in New Orleans revealed that over 90% of
the children had witnessed violence; over half had
been the victims of some form of violence; 40% had
seen a dead body.
- At least a third of American
children have witnessed violence between their parents.
Most have witnessed multiple instances.
- Between 3 and 10 million children
(depending upon the study) will witness domestic violence
in this country this year.
- The majority of children who
live in homes where there is domestic violence have
observed the violence at least once (75-87%, depending
on the study).
- Over a third of children in
one study reported seeing violence used by fathers
against mothers when a parent reported that no violence
occurred.
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What
Is the Connection Between Domestic Violence and Child
Abuse?
- The overlap between child
abuse and domestic violence in the same family is
significant. 40-60% of families who present with partner
violence also report child abuse.
- One study found that half
the children who were physically abused were caught
in the middle of an inter-parental attack.
- The more often violence is
used against a parent, the greater the risk that the
children are also abused.
- 77% of children in high violence
families were abused over their lifetime.
- Of 50 men imprisoned for killing
their child, 12(24%) had also assaulted their partners.
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What
Are the Effects of Exposure to Violence on Children?
- Most children who witness
domestic violence manifest some symptoms associated
with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.
- Witnessing violence affects
children's abilities to learn. They may have difficulty
focusing and concentrating in school. They are easily
distracted.
- Witnessing violence affects
children's behavior, sometimes making it difficult
to establish good peer relationships.
- Children who witness violence
may be more aggressive and fight more often.
- Growing up with violence affects
a child's basic drive to explore the world. Natural
curiosity is thwarted. Children may be less willing
to try new things.
- Children growing up with violence
are at greater risk to become violent themselves although
most do not.
- Children exposed to high levels
of parental violence are at risk for adjustment problems
in young adulthood.
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What
Are the Myths about Witnessing Violence?
- Myth: The younger the child, the
less the child will be affected by exposure to violence.
Young children are not immune to the effects of violence.
Clinical experience suggests that young children are
deeply affected by witnessing violence, particularly
if the perpetrator or victim of violence is a family
member.
- Myth: Young children will not remember
the violence they have witnessed.
Children do not forget what they have witnessed. Adults
hope that if the violence is not talked about, the
children's memories of the event will disappear. However,
young children demonstrate a remarkable capacity for
recalling traumatic events. Children's vivid accounts
of violent events stand in contrast to parent's reports
that their children did not see the violence or were
unaware of it.
- Myth: Violence is an urban problem
and only children living in urban areas witness violence.
Violence is not solely an urban problem. Violence
has touched the lives of families and children across
the country: in rural areas, in the suburbs and in
the inner city. Domestic violence can occur anywhere.
Child abuse and community violence occur with more
frequency in areas where there is a high concentration
of persons with inadequate housing and income, and
with high rates of drug use. This correlation speaks
to the need for addressing issues of poverty and inequity
in this country as one strategy for reducing violence.
- Myth: Violence is a racial problem
affecting primarily Black and Hispanic children.
Violence is not a racial problem nor does it exist
primarily in minority communities. Domestic violence
occurs at similar rates across all races and cultural
groups studied. Research suggests that community violence
is a function of poverty, not race. When people at
the same income level are compared, there are few
differences among races. This finding suggests that
the context of poverty, not race, is a main risk factor
for violence.
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