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

Parents' addiction, unemployment and divorce are risk factors for childhood abuse

2012-12-21
(Press-News.org) Adults who had parents who struggled with addiction, unemployment and divorce are 10 times more likely to have been victims of childhood physical abuse, according to a new study prepared by the University of Toronto's Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work.

The study, which was published online this week in the journal Child: Care, Health & Development, found that more than one-third of adults who grew up in homes where all three risk factors were present reported they had been physically abused by someone close to them while under the age of 18 and still living at home.

The results found that only 3.4 per cent of those with none of the three risk factors reported they had been physically abused. However, with each additional risk factor experienced, the prevalence of childhood physical abuse increased dramatically.

Approximately 13 per cent of those with one risk factor reported childhood physical abuse (CPA). The prevalence of child physical abuse was between 8% and 11% for those who had experienced parental divorce alone or parental unemployment alone but increased to between 18% and 19% for those who experienced parental addictions alone. Between 25 per cent and 30 per cent of those who had experienced two risk factors reported they had been abused in childhood. Among those with all three risk factors, the prevalence of CPA was between 36 and 41 per cent, representing a ten-fold increase from the 3.4 per cent reported by those without any of these risk factors. The study was based on two representative community samples, one study conducted in 1995 and the second, with a different sample, in 2005. Each survey included approximately 13,000 Canadians aged 18 and older.

"We were so astonished by the magnitude of the association between the combination of these three risk factors and child abuse in the 1995 survey that we replicated the analysis with a different sample from a 2005 survey," says co-author Jami-Leigh Sawyer, a University of Toronto doctoral student and a social worker at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children. "The findings in both data sets were remarkably consistent and very worrisome."

The study's findings have important clinical implications for pediatricians, family doctors, social workers and other healthcare providers working with children and their families, says lead author Esme Fuller-Thomson, Sandra Rotman Chair at the University of Toronto's Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work and Department of Family and Community Medicine. "It appears that children from homes with parental addictions, parental unemployment and parental divorce are particularly vulnerable to abuse. Such knowledge will hopefully improve the targeting of screening for childhood physical abuse."

### END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

GEOLOGY returns to Naica Cave, Mexico, and extends its reach to Mercury

2012-12-21
Boulder, Colo., USA – GEOLOGY ends 2012 with 23 new articles spanning a variety of geoscience phenomena and locations, including Mercury; Naica Cave, Mexico; Diamantina, Brazil; the Galápagos hotspot; China; the Aleutian island arc; Disko Bay and Uummannaq Fjord, central West Greenland; the California arc; the Pacific Ring of Fire; Po Plain, Italy; Torfajökull, Iceland; the U.S. Sierra Nevada; Spain; New Zealand; Turkey; Connecticut, USA; and Texas, USA. Papers cover 1. High-resolution images obtained by the MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging ...

Rebuilding blood vessels through gene therapy

2012-12-21
NEW YORK (Dec. 20, 2012) -- Diagnosed with severe coronary artery disease, a group of patients too ill for or not responding to other treatment options decided to take part in a clinical trial testing angiogenic gene therapy to help rebuild their damaged blood vessels. More than 10 years later, in a follow-up review of these patients, doctors at Baylor College of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College (where the clinical trial and review took place) and Stony Brook University Medical Center report the outcomes are promising and open the door for larger trials to begin. The ...

Liver mitochondria improve, increase after chronic alcohol feeding in mice

2012-12-21
Scientists at the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California (USC) have found evidence that liver mitochondria in mice adapt to become better metabolizers of alcohol and increase in number after chronic exposure, which may raise the potential for free radical damage associated with aging and cancer over time. The liver is a vital organ, playing a major role in metabolism and detoxification in the body. Overconsumption of alcohol has long been tied to liver diseases such as fatty liver, alcoholic hepatitis and cirrhosis, but how the substance damages ...

Evolution of flying bat clue to cancer and viruses

2012-12-21
The genes of long-living and virus resistant bats may provide clues to the future treatment and prevention of infectious diseases and cancer in people, researchers have found. Published in the journal Science, the research provides an insight into the evolution of bat's flight, resistance to viruses and relatively long life. Researchers at CSIRO and the Beijing Genome Institute led a team sequencing the genomes of two bat species - an Australian mega bat, the black flying fox, and a Chinese micro bat, David's Myotis. They then compared the bat genomes to the genomes of ...

The findings between DNMs and autism provides global view of mutability on human diseases

2012-12-21
December 21, 2012, Shenzhen, China – A study published online in Cell reports the latest investigation of de novo germline mutation by whole genome sequencing in autism patients. This study provides a global view of the landscape of mutability and its influence on genetic diversity and susceptibility in autism, and its implications on other human diseases. The work was a collaborative effort led by international teams comprised of the University of California, San Diego, BGI, and other institutes. The results are expected to shed new light on a deeper understanding of the ...

The JAMA Network announces new names, new embargo schedules for specialty journals

2012-12-21
Starting January 1, 2013 the Archives journals will have new titles and a new distribution schedule. Please provide proper attribution to the new journal names. On first reference, one time only, we would prefer that you provide this attribution: "a study published online today in JAMA Neurology (formerly Archives of Neurology) ..." The names are JAMA (specialty), not the Journal of the American Medical Association (specialty). Here are the new titles and new embargo schedule: Mondays 3pm central time/4pm eastern time JAMA Pediatrics JAMA Neurology JAMA Internal ...

Targeting taste receptors in the gut may help fight obesity

2012-12-21
Despite more than 25 years of research on antiobesity drugs, few medications have shown long-term success. Now researchers reporting online on December 21 in the Cell Press journal Trends in Endocrinology & Metabolism say that targeting taste sensors in the gut may be a promising new strategy. The gut "tastes" what we eat—bitter, sweet, fat, and savory—in much the same way as the tongue and through the use of similar signaling mechanisms. The result is the release of hormones to control satiety and blood sugar levels when food reaches the gut. The sensors, or receptors, ...

JCI early table of contents for Dec. 21, 2012

2012-12-21
The X-factor in liver metabolism After you eat, your liver switches from producing glucose to storing it. At the same time, a cellular signaling pathway known as the unfolded protein response (UPR) is transiently activated, but it is not clear how this pathway contributes to the liver's metabolic switch. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers led by Phillip Scherer at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center report that activation of the UPR triggers the expression of Xbp1s, a protein that regulates genes needed for the metabolic ...

The X factor in liver metabolism

2012-12-21
After you eat, your liver switches from producing glucose to storing it. At the same time, a cellular signaling pathway known as the unfolded protein response (UPR) is transiently activated, but it is not clear how this pathway contributes to the liver's metabolic switch. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers led by Phillip Scherer at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center report that activation of the UPR triggers the expression of Xbp1s, a protein that regulates genes needed for the metabolic switch. Scherer and colleagues found ...

Ironing out the link between H. pylori infection and gastric cancer

2012-12-21
H. pylori frequently causes gastric ulcers and is also one of the greatest risk factors for gastric cancer. H. pylori infection is also associated with another gastric cancer risk factor, iron deficiency. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers led by Richard Peek at Vanderbilt University investigated the influence of iron on H. pylori-induced gastric cancer. Peek and colleagues found that low iron accelerated the development of H. pylori-associated cancerous lesions in gerbils. Further, H. pylori strains isolated from a human population at high ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Brain cells drive endurance gains after exercise

Same-day hospital discharge is safe in selected patients after TAVI

Why do people living at high altitudes have better glucose control? The answer was in plain sight

Red blood cells soak up sugar at high altitude, protecting against diabetes

A new electrolyte points to stronger, safer batteries

Environment: Atmospheric pollution directly linked to rocket re-entry

Targeted radiation therapy improves quality of life outcomes for patients with multiple brain metastases

Cardiovascular events in women with prior cervical high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion

Transplantation and employment earnings in kidney transplant recipients

Brain organoids can be trained to solve a goal-directed task

Treatment can protect extremely premature babies from lung disease

Roberto Morandotti wins prestigious Max Born Award for pioneering research in quantum photonics

Scientists map brain's blood pressure control center

Acute coronary events registry provides insights into sex-specific differences

Bar-Ilan University and NVIDIA researchers improve AI’s ability to understand spatial instructions

New single-cell transcriptomic clock reveals intrinsic and systemic T cell aging in COVID-19 and HIV

Smaller fish and changing food webs – even where species numbers stay the same

Missed opportunity to protect pregnant women and newborns: Study shows low vaccination rates among expectant mothers in Norway against COVID-19 and influenza

Emotional memory region of aged brain is sensitive to processed foods

Neighborhood factors may lead to increased COPD-related emergency department visits, hospitalizations

Food insecurity impacts employees’ productivity

Prenatal infection increases risk of heavy drinking later in life

‘The munchies’ are real and could benefit those with no appetite

FAU researchers discover novel bacteria in Florida’s stranded pygmy sperm whales

DEGU debuts with better AI predictions and explanations

‘Giant superatoms’ unlock a new toolbox for quantum computers

Jeonbuk National University researchers explore metal oxide electrodes as a new frontier in electrochemical microplastic detection

Cannabis: What is the profile of adults at low risk of dependence?

Medical and materials innovations of two women engineers recognized by Sony and Nature

Blood test “clocks” predict when Alzheimer’s symptoms will start

[Press-News.org] Parents' addiction, unemployment and divorce are risk factors for childhood abuse