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Abused Girls Become Abused Women
By Ed Edelson HealthScoutNews ReporterTHURSDAY, Aug. 9 (HealthScoutNews)
A British study finds that women who experience abuse in
childhood are likely to suffer the same kind of abuse in their adult
lives. While previous research focused mainly on whether childhood sexual
abuse increases the risk of sexual abuse in adulthood, a new survey of
more than 1,200 women shows that any sort of early abuse leads to an
increased risk of victimization in adulthood. The finding by a team led by
Dr. Jeremy Coid, a forensic psychiatrist at St. Bartholomew's Hospital in
London, appears in the Aug. 11 issue of The Lancet. Women subjected to
unwanted sexual intercourse in their young lives, for example, were three
times more likely to be the victims of rape or domestic violence as
adults, and women who suffered severe beatings during childhood reported a
high incidence of domestic violence, rape and other trauma, the
researchers say. The information was gathered from questionnaires filled
out by women living in an inner-city slum area of London when they visited
their doctors. Nearly a third of the women reported some kind of childhood
abuse: 88 had been raped; 116 had unwanted sexual activity that stopped
short of rape; 160 had been severely beaten, most of them several times,
and 17 reported beatings, unwanted sexual activity and rape. Women raped
in childhood were at least three times more likely to be raped as adults,
the researchers say. And they were nearly three times more likely to
experience another kind of sexual assault, four times more likely to
experience domestic violence and more than twice as likely to suffer other
kinds of trauma. Childhood beatings were associated with a greater
likelihood of domestic violence and rape, sexual assault and other traumas
in adult life. Coid says the findings almost certainly apply to women in
the United States, but the reason for the link is unclear. "The
bottom line is that we don't know," he says. He offers three possible
explanations, saying "there is no sufficient evidence to confirm any
of them." It's possible that because of their early experiences, the
women "may be more likely to drift down the social scale or not
progress up, thereby remaining in a geographical area where the risks are
higher," Coid says. It's also possible that some women are more prone
to high-risk behavior, putting themselves in dangerous situations all
their lives, but that can be described as blaming the victim, he says. The
basic problem is "an extraordinary paucity of research" about
child abuse, says Dr. Richard D. Krugman, professor of pediatrics and dean
of the University of Colorado School of Medicine, who chaired the U. S.
Advisory Board on Child Abuse and Neglect from 1989 to 1993. That board's
report described child abuse as a national emergency and recommended a
substantial increase in federal support in the field, a recommendation
that has been ignored, Krugman says. Both the public and the medical
profession shrink from the subject, he says.
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