Sentences with phrase «between parental abuse»

Not exact matches

I am more opposed to unwanted children being mistreated and abused and shuffled between Foster homes or living on the streets not knowing parental love.
An evaluation of Hawaii's Healthy Start program found no differences between experimental and control groups in maternal life course (attainment of educational and life goals), substance abuse, partner violence, depressive symptoms, the home as a learning environment, parent - child interaction, parental stress, and child developmental and health measures.25 However, program participation was associated with a reduction in the number of child abuse cases.
Previous studies show strong relationships between adult health conditions — anxiety, panic and psychiatric disorders, such as post-traumatic stress disorder, substance misuse and others — and adversities experienced in childhood, such as abuse, witnessing violence, parental incarceration and others.
The Role of Depression and Dissociation in the Link Between Childhood Sexual Abuse and Later Parental Practices Collin - Vezina, Cyr, Pauze, & McDuff Journal of Trauma and Dissociation, 6 (1), 2005 View Abstract Explores the link between child sexual abuse and maternal parenting, while taking into account mothers» childhood physical and emotional traumas and current depressive and dissociative syBetween Childhood Sexual Abuse and Later Parental Practices Collin - Vezina, Cyr, Pauze, & McDuff Journal of Trauma and Dissociation, 6 (1), 2005 View Abstract Explores the link between child sexual abuse and maternal parenting, while taking into account mothers» childhood physical and emotional traumas and current depressive and dissociative sympAbuse and Later Parental Practices Collin - Vezina, Cyr, Pauze, & McDuff Journal of Trauma and Dissociation, 6 (1), 2005 View Abstract Explores the link between child sexual abuse and maternal parenting, while taking into account mothers» childhood physical and emotional traumas and current depressive and dissociative sybetween child sexual abuse and maternal parenting, while taking into account mothers» childhood physical and emotional traumas and current depressive and dissociative sympabuse and maternal parenting, while taking into account mothers» childhood physical and emotional traumas and current depressive and dissociative symptoms.
Felitti and colleagues1 first described ACEs and defined it as exposure to psychological, physical or sexual abuse, and household dysfunction including substance abuse (problem drinking / alcoholic and / or street drugs), mental illness, a mother treated violently and criminal behaviour in the household.1 Along with the initial ACE study, other studies have characterised ACEs as neglect, parental separation, loss of family members or friends, long - term financial adversity and witness to violence.2 3 From the original cohort of 9508 American adults, more than half of respondents (52 %) experienced at least one adverse childhood event.1 Since the original cohort, ACE exposures have been investigated globally revealing comparable prevalence to the original cohort.4 5 More recently in 2014, a survey of 4000 American children found that 60.8 % of children had at least one form of direct experience of violence, crime or abuse.6 The ACE study precipitated interest in the health conditions of adults maltreated as children as it revealed links to chronic diseases such as obesity, autoimmune diseases, heart, lung and liver diseases, and cancer in adulthood.1 Since then, further evidence has revealed relationships between ACEs and physical and mental health outcomes, such as increased risk of substance abuse, suicide and premature mortality.4 7
When you look at it carefully, and we had a big sample, what we found was that the association between parental divorce and suicidal ideation disappeared when I took out women who had also experienced parental addictions and abuse.
Parental mental illness Relatively little has been written about the effect of serious and persistent parental mental illness on child abuse, although many studies show that substantial proportions of mentally ill mothers are living away from their children.14 Much of the discussion about the effect of maternal mental illness on child abuse focuses on the poverty and homeless - ness of mothers who are mentally ill, as well as on the behavior problems of their children — all issues that are correlated with involvement with child welfare services.15 Jennifer Culhane and her colleagues followed a five - year birth cohort among women who had ever been homeless and found an elevated rate of involvement with child welfare services and a nearly seven - times - higher rate of having children placed into foster care.16 More direct evidence on the relationship between maternal mental illness and child abuse in the general population, however, is strikingly scarce, especially given the 23 percent rate of self - reported major depression in the previous twelve months among mothers involved with child welfare services, as shown in Parental mental illness Relatively little has been written about the effect of serious and persistent parental mental illness on child abuse, although many studies show that substantial proportions of mentally ill mothers are living away from their children.14 Much of the discussion about the effect of maternal mental illness on child abuse focuses on the poverty and homeless - ness of mothers who are mentally ill, as well as on the behavior problems of their children — all issues that are correlated with involvement with child welfare services.15 Jennifer Culhane and her colleagues followed a five - year birth cohort among women who had ever been homeless and found an elevated rate of involvement with child welfare services and a nearly seven - times - higher rate of having children placed into foster care.16 More direct evidence on the relationship between maternal mental illness and child abuse in the general population, however, is strikingly scarce, especially given the 23 percent rate of self - reported major depression in the previous twelve months among mothers involved with child welfare services, as shown in parental mental illness on child abuse, although many studies show that substantial proportions of mentally ill mothers are living away from their children.14 Much of the discussion about the effect of maternal mental illness on child abuse focuses on the poverty and homeless - ness of mothers who are mentally ill, as well as on the behavior problems of their children — all issues that are correlated with involvement with child welfare services.15 Jennifer Culhane and her colleagues followed a five - year birth cohort among women who had ever been homeless and found an elevated rate of involvement with child welfare services and a nearly seven - times - higher rate of having children placed into foster care.16 More direct evidence on the relationship between maternal mental illness and child abuse in the general population, however, is strikingly scarce, especially given the 23 percent rate of self - reported major depression in the previous twelve months among mothers involved with child welfare services, as shown in NSCAW.17
Prior research also provides insight into how paternal risk factors such as domestic violence, incarceration, multipartner fertility, and substance abuse can decrease an unmarried father's likelihood of being involved with his children.1, 2 Drawing on survey data from unmarried Texas parents, CFRP builds on these findings in several ways: 1) examining the intersection and associations between the parental relationship, father involvement, paternal support, and AOP signing, 2) investigating how each of these topics is informed by a web of personal, interpersonal, and environmental factors, and 3) approximating how the parental relationship, father involvement, and paternal support are likely to change over time.
So - called parental notification and / or consent laws for abortion, which do nothing to improve communication between parents and children but rather have the potential to harm young people who are already vulnerable — and can especially endanger minors when they are victims of abuse, rape or incest at the hand of a parent.
Parental alienation involves one parent spoiling the relationship between a child and the other parent in the absence of actual abuse or neglect.
In a set of exploratory analyses, we examined differences of 26 variables between the 3 groups before and after the casino opened that might explain why parents who were ex-poor were able to maintain better supervision of their children; factors included single - parent or step - parent household, parental mental illness, drug abuse or crime, traumatic life events, and lack of time to spend with child because of other demands (eg, large family or working 2 jobs).
Scales used to assess inconsistent maternal enforcement of rules, loud arguments between the parents, low maternal educational aspirations for the child, maternal possessiveness, maternal use of guilt to control the child, maternal anger toward the child, parental cigarette smoking, parental supervision of the child, paternal assistance to the child's mother, paternal role fulfillment, and maternal verbal abuse were obtained from the DPI and instruments assessing maternal child - rearing attitudes and behaviors that were administered during the maternal interviews.28 - 31 Measures of maternal punishment, parental affection toward the child, parental time spent with the child, and poor parental communication with the child were administered during the maternal and offspring interviews using scales assessing parental warmth, parent - child communication, and parental support and availability.28, 29,31 Data regarding parental home maintenance and maternal behavior during the interview were provided by interviewer observations.
There were no significant differences between these659 families and the original 976 families for demographic characteristics, maladaptive parental behavior, maternal psychiatric symptoms, offspring temperament, or the overall prevalence of paternal psychiatric symptoms, although paternal substance abuse in 1975 was less prevalent among the 659 families in the present sample than among the 976 families in the original sample.
This study examined the association between 10 categories of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs): abuse (physical, emotional, or sexual); neglect (physical or emotional); and growing up with household substance abuse, criminality of household members, mental illness among household members, and parental discord and illicit drug use.
In the total sample, bivariate and multivariate analysis revealed significant associations between (1) sexual abuse (bivariate: OR 7.9, p = 0.003; multivariate: OR 7.6, p = 0.003), (2) physical abuse (OR 2, p = 0.007; OR 2.0, p = 0.006) and (3) parental divorce (OR 2.8, p < 0.001; OR 2.7, p = 0.001), and lifetime suicide attempts.
Bivariate and multivariate analyses were performed to examine the associations between the different childhood adversities (physical abuse, sexual abuse, parental death, parental divorce, other parental loss, family violence, physical illness, financial adversity) and lifetime suicidal ideation, plans and attempts.
Exploring the Link Between Maternal History of Childhood Victimization and Child Risk of Maltreatment Thompson Journal of Trauma Practice, 5 (2), 2006 View Abstract Attempts to determine the relationship of parental history of abuse with a child's risk for maltreatment.
Gardner, R.A. (1987), The Parental Alienation Syndrome and the Differentiation between Fabricated and Genuine Child Sex Abuse, Creative Therapeutics, Cresskill, N.J.
Gardner, R.A. (1987), The Parental Alienation Syndrome and the Differentiation between Fabricated and Genuine Child Sex Abuse, Creative Therapeutics, Cresskill, N.J. Gardner, R.A. (1989).
The Parental Alienation Syndrome and the Differentiation Between Fabricated and Genuine Child Sexual Abuse, 1992.
Battle lines were drawn and it wasn't surprising that the alienation issue quickly became a clash between women's rights advocates against abuse of women and children, and father's rights advocates against parental alienation of the children.
«Dr. Richard Gardner testified for the defense that he prepared a report and concluded that defendant was not engaging in parental alienation, that defendant should be awarded custody of the four children, and that the problems between the children and plaintiff were a result of plaintiff's own neglect and abuse, and plaintiff's being schizophrenic, paranoid, delusional and psychotic.»
It is through collaboration between custody evaluators, judges, and attorneys that a community of experts develops to more appropriately manage difficult issues in custody cases such as Parental Alienation, Child Abuse, and other forms of pathology that directly impact the developmental well being of children.
Substance - abusing runaway adolescent dependent, family conflict, disengagement between family members, abuse and neglect, parental substance use and parental depression
Differentiating between parental alienation syndrome and bona fide abuse - neglect.
Patterson's article references Gardner's book, The Parental Alienation Syndrome and the Differentiation Between Fabricated and Genuine Child Sex Abuse.
For example: the loss of a loved one, parental separation or divorce, significant tension between parents, financial insecurity, parental mental health issues, or parental substance abuse.
The parental alienation syndrome and the differentiation between fabricated and genuine child sex abuse.
Gardner, R. A. (1999), Differentiating between the parental alienation syndrome and bona fide abuse / neglect.
However, heterotypic continuity of psychopathology is also known across generations, such as the consistently reported relationship between parental substance abuse, and antisocial behavior and somatization problems in the daughters (Bohman et al. 1984; Cadoret 1978).
If there is any validity to the arguments of parental alienation opponents who say that mothers who prevent their children from having access to their fathers are simply attempting to protect their children from abuse, then a proper investigation should reveal evidence of troubling dynamics between the offending parent and child well before the marital breakdown.
Recognition of the developments of Dr. Gardner's contribution began with his first book on this topic, Family Evaluation in Child Custody Litigation published in 1982, and it was followed by The Parental Alienation Syndrome and the Differentiation Between Fabricated and Genuine Child Sex Abuse in 1987.
It seems likely that experts can differentiate between abuse and Parental Alienation.
Gardner and other researches include criteria for differentiating between Parental Alienation and Bona Fide abuse - neglect.
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