Children as victims of violence: A national survey
Date
1994
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Publisher
Pediatrics
Abstract
Description
The goal of this study was to gain a more comprehensive perspective on the scope, variety, and consequences of child victimization, which has been obscured by a fragmentation into specific problems like sexual abuse or kidnapping. Two thousand children aged 10 to 16 years were interviewed in a national telephone survey of children. In the previous year, a quarter of the children had experienced a completed victimization, one in eight had experienced an injury, and one in a hundred required medical attention as a result. Nonfamily physical assaults were the most numerous. Contact sexual abuse occurred to 3.2% of girls and 0.6% of boys. There were also substantial numbers of incidents of attempted kidnappings and violence directed to children's genitals. The victimization of children occurs to a greater extent than has been previously reported and is poorly represented in official statistics. The authors argue for a more comprehensive interest in children's victimization including better national statistics about the problem.
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Keywords
Abuse-sexual, Best Practices-Research, Child welfare -- statistics, Physical abuse