Understanding emotional abuse
@article{Rees2009UnderstandingEA,
title={Understanding emotional abuse},
author={Corinne A Rees},
journal={Archives of Disease in Childhood},
year={2009},
volume={95},
pages={59 - 67}
}Emotional abuse lacks the public and political profile of physical and sexual abuse, despite being at their core and frequently their most damaging dimension. Difficulties in recognition, definition and legal proof put children at risk of remaining in damaging circumstances. Assessment of the emotional environment is necessary when interpreting possible physical or sexual abuse and balancing the risks and benefits of intervention. This article considers factors contributing to professional…
51 Citations
Emotional abuse : the subjective experience of professionals and the obstacles to prevention and intervention
- Psychology
- 2014
The purpose of this study was to explore the subjective experience of the professionals in the Denver/Boulder area working with emotional abuse that occurs between children and their caretakers and…
Child Psychological Abuse
- PsychologyPediatrics in Review
- 2017
Considered synonymous, child emotional and psychological abuse (hereafter referred to as psychological abuse) is a type of maltreatment that can be difficult for clinicians to detect and assess.…
All they need is love? Helping children to recover from neglect and abuse
- PsychologyArchives of Disease in Childhood
- 2010
The aim of this paper is to contribute to the understanding of recovery, and paediatricians' roles in achieving it.
Psychological Maltreatment
- PsychologyPediatrics
- 2012
Prevention before occurrence will require both the use of universal interventions aimed at promoting the type of parenting that is now recognized to be necessary for optimal child development, alongside theUse of targeted interventions directed at improving parental sensitivity to a child’s cues during infancy and later parent-child interactions.
Child Maltreatment and Violence Committee and Neglect and AMERICAN ACADEMY OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT
- Psychology
- 2012
Psychological or emotional maltreatment of children may be the most challenging and prevalent form of child abuse and neglect. Caregiver behaviors include acts of omission (ignoring need for social…
[Family violence in a sample of children and adolescents with disabilities].
- PsychologyCadernos de saude publica
- 2016
There is a need for greater awareness-raising and training of health teams for detection and notification of child abuse, and efforts should be made to support these families of children and adolescents with disabilities.
Sticks and stones may break my bones: the effects of emotional abuse. Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment & Trauma
- Psychology
- 2011
The relationship between psychological maltreatment in childhood and adult wellbeing has previously been established via the statistical modelling of psychometric data. This study examines a set of…
Family Violence in Context: An Intergenerational Systemic Model
- PsychologyThe Family Journal
- 2021
An intergenerational systemic model identifies multiple contexts and levels for evaluating and treating family violence over the life span and helps families transcend adversity and realize post-traumatic growth and resilience.
Sticks and Stones May Break My Bones: The Effects of Emotional Abuse
- Psychology
- 2011
The relationship between psychological maltreatment in childhood and adult well-being has previously been established via the statistical modeling of psychometric data. This study examines a set of…
References
SHOWING 1-10 OF 69 REFERENCES
Emotional abuse and neglect (psychological maltreatment): a conceptual framework.
- PsychologyChild abuse & neglect
- 2002
Surviving and Coping with Emotional Abuse in Childhood
- Psychology
- 2001
Emotional abuse, even when it is the sole form of abuse, can be psychologically harmful, but there are a number of internal and environmental factors that may protect children from ultimate damage.…
The long-term impact of the physical, emotional, and sexual abuse of children: a community study.
- PsychologyChild abuse & neglect
- 1996
Understanding the Behavioral and Emotional Consequences of Child Abuse
- PsychologyPediatrics
- 2008
Pediatricians can assist caregivers by helping them recognize the abused or neglected child's altered responses, formulate more effective coping strategies, and mobilize available community resources.
Intergenerational transmission of child abuse: rates, research, and clinical implications.
- PsychologyThe American journal of psychiatry
- 1993
There is no justification for any extremist advocacy in apportioning responsibility between the "sins of the parents" and the failings of society and the contention that clinical research on abuse is inferior to, and must give way to, large-scale or statistically balanced self-report and questionnaire surveys is plausible, popular, convincing, and wrong.
ABC of child abuse. Emotional abuse and delay in growth.
- MedicineBMJ
- 1989
Many exceptionally short children with no detectable organic disorder to account for their condition are that way because they have beenand are usually continuing to be-abused within their families.…
Child abuse and neglect and the brain--a review.
- PsychologyJournal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines
- 2000
The importance of early intervention and attention to the chronicity of environmental adversity may indicate the need for permanent alternative caregivers, in order to preserve the development of the most vulnerable children.
Non-infant adoption from care: lessons for safeguarding children.
- Psychology, MedicineChild: care, health and development
- 2009
This study highlights the importance in safeguarding children of considering the implications of parental childhood experiences, and indicates the risk of delay, and acknowledges the need for better resources for managing emotional dysregulation.