PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Childhood psychological abuse as harmful as sexual or physical abuse

Often unrecognized, emotional abuse prevalent form of child abuse, study finds

2014-10-08
(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON - Children who are emotionally abused and neglected face similar and sometimes worse mental health problems as children who are physically or sexually abused, yet psychological abuse is rarely addressed in prevention programs or in treating victims, according to a new study published by the American Psychological Association.

"Given the prevalence of childhood psychological abuse and the severity of harm to young victims, it should be at the forefront of mental health and social service training," said study lead author Joseph Spinazzola, PhD, of The Trauma Center at Justice Resource Institute, Brookline, Massachusetts. The article appears in a special online issue of the APA journal Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy.

Researchers used the National Child Traumatic Stress Network Core Data Set to analyze data from 5,616 youths with lifetime histories of one or more of three types of abuse: psychological maltreatment (emotional abuse or emotional neglect), physical abuse and sexual abuse. The majority (62 percent) had a history of psychological maltreatment, and nearly a quarter (24 percent) of all the cases were exclusively psychological maltreatment, which the study defined as care-giver inflicted bullying, terrorizing, coercive control, severe insults, debasement, threats, overwhelming demands, shunning and/or isolation.

Children who had been psychologically abused suffered from anxiety, depression, low self-esteem, symptoms of post-traumatic stress and suicidality at the same rate and, in some cases, at a greater rate than children who were physically or sexually abused. Among the three types of abuse, psychological maltreatment was most strongly associated with depression, general anxiety disorder, social anxiety disorder, attachment problems and substance abuse. Psychological maltreatment that occurred alongside physical or sexual abuse was associated with significantly more severe and far-ranging negative outcomes than when children were sexually and physically abused and not psychologically abused, the study found. Moreover, sexual and physical abuse had to occur at the same time to have the same effect as psychological abuse alone on behavioral issues at school, attachment problems and self-injurious behaviors, the research found.

"Child protective service case workers may have a harder time recognizing and substantiating emotional neglect and abuse because there are no physical wounds," said Spinazzola. "Also, psychological abuse isn't considered a serious social taboo like physical and sexual child abuse. We need public awareness initiatives to help people understand just how harmful psychological maltreatment is for children and adolescents."

Nearly 3 million U.S. children experience some form of maltreatment annually, predominantly by a parent, family member or other adult caregiver, according to the U.S. Children's Bureau. The American Academy of Pediatrics in 2012 identified psychological maltreatment as "the most challenging and prevalent form of child abuse and neglect."

For the current study, the sample was 42 percent boys and was 38 percent white; 21 percent African-American; 30 percent Hispanic; 7 percent other; and 4 percent unknown. The data were collected between 2004 and 2010 with the average age of the children at the beginning of the collection between 10 and 12 years. Clinicians interviewed the children, who also answered questionnaires to determine behavioral health symptoms and the traumatic events they had experienced. In addition, caregivers responded to a questionnaire with 113 items pertaining to the child's behavior. Various sources, including clinicians' reports, provided each child's trauma history involving psychological maltreatment, physical abuse or sexual abuse. INFORMATION: Article: Unseen Wounds: The Contribution of Psychological Maltreatment to Child and Adolescent Mental Health and Risk Outcomes, Oct. 8, 2014, Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy Joseph Spinazzola, PhD, and Hilary Hodgdon, PhD, The Trauma Center at Justice Resource Institute, Brookline, Massachusetts; Li-Jung Liang, PhD, University of California, Los Angeles School of Medicine; Julian D. Ford, PhD, University of Connecticut Medical School; Christopher M. Layne, PhD, and Robert Pynoos, MD, National Center for Child Traumatic Stress, Los Angeles, and University of California, Los Angeles; Ernestine C. Briggs, PhD, National Center for Child Traumatic Stress, Durham, North Carolina, and Duke University School of Medicine; Bradley Stolbach, PhD, University of Chicago.

Article is available upon request from the APA Public Affairs Office.

Contact: Joseph Spinazzola at jspinazzola@traumacenter.org or (617) 872-6391. The American Psychological Association, in Washington, D.C., is the largest scientific and professional organization representing psychology in the United States. APA's membership includes nearly 130,000 researchers, educators, clinicians, consultants and students. Through its divisions in 54 subfields of psychology and affiliations with 60 state, territorial and Canadian provincial associations, APA works to advance the creation, communication and application of psychological knowledge to benefit society and improve people's lives. http://www.apa.org

If you do not want to receive APA news releases, please let us know at public.affairs@apa.org or 202-336-5700.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Scientists question fundamental theory about education of immune police

Scientists question fundamental theory about education of immune police
2014-10-08
AUGUSTA, Ga. – A fundamental theory about how our thymus educates our immune police appears to be wrong, scientists say. It's known that stem cells come out of the bone marrow and travel to the tiny thymus gland behind the breastbone to learn to become one of two CD4T cell types: one leads an attack, the other keeps the peace. One widely held concept of why they become one or the other is that, despite coming from the same neighborhood and going to the same school, they are exposed to different things in the thymus, said Dr. Leszek Ignatowicz, immunologist at ...

Timely Ebola information from Journal of Disaster Medicine & Public Health Preparedness

2014-10-08
Rockville, MD – The Society for Disaster Medicine and Public Health is committed to examining the details of individual disasters and public health crises. With the recent arrival of Ebola in the United States, the journal is launching a special issue on the virus. The journal will serve as an educated and authoritative voice on the virus, risk and threat level, potential of outbreak, preparation and response for the public and media. The Journal of Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness, began covering events in their entirety via special issues this ...

Robotic surgery: More complications, higher expense for some conditions

2014-10-08
NEW YORK, NY (October 8, 2014)—For benign gynecologic conditions, robot-assisted surgery involves more complications during surgery and may be significantly more expensive than conventional laparoscopic surgery, according to a study by researchers at Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC). The results were published online today in Obstetrics & Gynecology. Robot-assisted surgery was first widely used for radical prostatectomy. For procedures such as prostatectomy, where there were previously no minimally invasive options, robot-assisted laparoscopy often offered ...

Trying to fool a kindergartner? Not so fast

2014-10-08
This news release is available in French. Montreal & Vancouver, October 8, 2014 — From the words for colours to how to tie a shoelace, kids have lots to learn — and for the most part, they depend on others to teach it to them. But whether deliberately or inadvertently, other people sometimes misinform. So at what age can kids tell trustworthy teachers from confident tricksters? A new study published in PLOS ONE by psychology researchers from Concordia University and the University of British Columbia shows that by the age of five, children become wary ...

Managers can boost creativity by 'empowering leadership' and earning employees' trust

2014-10-08
HOUSTON – (Oct. 8, 2014) – Managers can promote creativity in employees by "empowering leadership" and earning employees' trust, according to a new study by Rice University and American University. The researchers investigated, for the first time, the complex effect of the interaction among empowering leadership, uncertainty avoidance and trust on creativity. They collected supervisors' ratings of employee creativity in two separate studies in China: one with employees of an energy-saving light bulb design and manufacturing company and the other with the employees ...

Gay and bisexual youth can thrive with positive family relationships

2014-10-08
Gay and bisexual youth who are supported by their family and feel comfortable talking to them about their lifestyle are less likely to become involved in high-risk sexual behaviors, according to a recent Rutgers study. Published in the Journal of Marital & Family Therapy, the Rutgers School of Social Work study, Condoms and connection: Parents, gay and lesbian youth and HIV risk, found that positive family relationships and open dialogue led to an increase in safe sex practices, including the use of condoms, while disrupted family relationships resulted in risky sexual ...

Drug regimen enough to control immune disease after some bone marrow transplants

2014-10-08
Johns Hopkins and other cancer researchers report that a very short course of a chemotherapy drug, called cyclophosphamide, not only can prevent a life-threatening immune response in some bone marrow transplant recipients, but also can eliminate such patients' need for the usual six months of immune suppression medicines commonly prescribed to prevent severe forms of this immune response. Patients receive cyclophosphamide for two days after their bone marrow transplant, in addition to two other chemotherapy drugs given before the transplant. Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer ...

Slime-producing molecules help spread disease from cats to sea otters

2014-10-08
The spread of diseases from land animals to sea otters and other marine mammals is aided and abetted by gelatinous, sticky polymers produced by seaweed, reports a research team headed by a UC Davis veterinary infectious-disease expert. These large, complex molecules form slimy biofilms and bind water-borne organic matter into larger particles, in which disease-causing microorganisms can become embedded and introduced to the marine food chain, the researchers discovered. Using the parasite Toxoplasma gondii as a model, they showed how these sticky polymers increase the ...

Combined behavioral support and medication offers smokers best chance of quitting

2014-10-08
Rochester, MN, October 7, 2014 – Numerous randomized clinical trials have shown the effectiveness of the two major forms of smoking cessation treatment – behavioral support and medication - in helping smokers quit. Researchers have now demonstrated that this approach can successfully translate to the "real world" and that a combination of the two treatments offers almost a threefold chance of success over attempts to quit without using a cessation aid. Their findings are published in Mayo Clinic Proceedings. "Randomized clinical trials have a high internal ...

Cost sensitive bushmeat hunters help out conservering hunted wildlife species

Cost sensitive bushmeat hunters help out conservering hunted wildlife species
2014-10-08
There is evidence that hunter-gatherers are optimal foragers whose behaviour is influenced by costs associated with foraging, and therefore for example rising the costs of ammunition could potentially help conserving wild animals. However, there has been a paucity of studies on whether the behaviour of bushmeat hunters, like that of consumers, is cost sensitive moneywise. In Ecuador, ammunition prices rose unexpectedly by 300 per cent in early 2009, because of a tax imposed by the national Government. This happened right when Anders Sirén, then postdoc researcher ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

$3.5M grant to Georgia State will fuel space research across the globe

Polar molecules dance to the tunes of microwaves

Quantum researchers cause controlled ‘wobble’ in the nucleus of a single atom

Foods with low Nutri-Scores associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular diseases

Research reveals reality of Ice Age teen puberty

Use of biomarkers in the management of inflammatory bowel disease

Powered by renewable energy, microbes turn CO2 into protein and vitamins

Scientists aim to decode the genetic roots of mental illness on a large scale

Retinopathy associated with hair dye

Race, social determinants of health, and the quality of diabetic eye care

Molecular, socioeconomic, and clinical factors affecting racial and ethnic disparities in colorectal cancer survival

City of Hope and Biopharmaceutical Research Company announce first patient has received BRC-001, a first-in-class cannabinoid therapeutic, in a clinical trial investigating supportive care in breast c

Catalyzing environmental cleanup: A highly active and selective molecular catalyst and electrified membrane

Dual-feedback healing mechanism redefining anti-oxidation coatings in fiber reinforced composites

NCCN commits to sharing award-winning resources for people with cancer in Spanish and other languages

Development strategies for using carbon-based catalysts in CO2 conversion

Breakthrough research extends hope for gastric cancer patients with peritoneal metasis

Genetic carriers for sickle cell disease have higher risks of blood clots across diverse ancestries

Study finds unique pattern of blood clots in sickle cell trait, but low overall clot risk

Deep learning for strain field customization in bioreactor with dielectric elastomer actuator array

Killer yeasts may help remedy a craft beer brewing bother

Nationwide awards recognize 21 students, schools and educators’ commitment to health

Bake, melt or ignite: How synthesis methods have a profound impact on disordered materials

A majority of Americans can’t recall most First Amendment rights

2024 Blavatnik National Awards for Young Scientists announced

TTUHSC’s Jerry H. Hodge School of Pharmacy establishes Brain Drug Discovery Center

Collaborative three-campus QB3 research team awarded $12 million CIRM grant to study origins of autism in diverse population

Cannabis and older adults: Poll shows current use patterns, beliefs and risks

Dr. Baptiste Lacoste, of the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute and uOttawa Brain and Mind Research Institute, receives a SynGAP Research Fund (SRF) Grant for Groundbreaking Research on Vascular and M

$75,000 prize inspired by 18th century Scots economist attracts global entries

[Press-News.org] Childhood psychological abuse as harmful as sexual or physical abuse
Often unrecognized, emotional abuse prevalent form of child abuse, study finds