| Physical abuse | |
|---|---|
| Boy violently slapping another boy's head | |
| Specialty | Emergency medicine |
| Differential diagnosis | Accidental injury Self-injury |
Physical abuse is any intentional act causinginjury ortrauma to another person oranimal by way of bodily contact. In most cases,[citation needed] children are the victims of physical abuse, but adults can also be victims, as in cases ofdomestic violence orworkplace aggression. Alternative terms sometimes used includephysical assault orphysical violence, and may also includesexual abuse. Physical abuse may involve more than one abuser, and more than one victim.
Physical abuse means any non-accidental act or behavior causinginjury,trauma, or other physicalsuffering orbodily harm. Abusive acts toward children can often result from parents' attempts atchild discipline through excessivecorporal punishment.[1][2]
A number of causes ofphysical abuse against children have been identified, the most common of which, according to Mash and Wolfe, being:[3]
Physically abused children are at risk for later interpersonal problems involving aggressive behavior, and adolescents are at a much greater risk forsubstance use disorders. In addition, symptoms of depression, emotional distress, andsuicidal ideation are also common features of people who have been physically abused. Studies have also shown that children with a history of physical abuse may meetDSM-IV-TR criteria forpost traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).[3] As many as one-third of children who experience physical abuse are also at risk to become abusive as adults.[4]
Researchers have pointed to other potential psycho-biological effects of child physical abuse on parenting, when abused children become adults. These recent findings may, at least in part, be carried forward by epigenetic changes that impact the regulation of stress physiology.[5]
Evidence-based interventions for physical abuse includecognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) as well as video-feedback interventions and child-parentpsychodynamic psychotherapy; all of which specifically target anger patterns and distorted beliefs, and offer training and/or reflection, support, and modelling that focuses on parenting skills and expectations, as well as increasing empathy for the child by supporting the parent's taking the child's perspective.[6][7][8]
These forms of treatment may include training in social competence and management of daily demands in an effort to decreaseparental stress, which is a known risk factor for physical abuse. Although these treatment and prevention strategies are to help children and parents of children who have been abused, some of these methods can also be applied to adults who have physically abused.[3]
Physical abuse has also been observed amongAdélie penguins in Antarctica.[9]