>> ASIAONE / JUST WOMAN / MOTHERHOOD / STORIES / STORY
Melissa Sim
Fri, Oct 03, 2008
The Straits Times
Abusing spouse - kids hurt too

ACADEMICS, social workers and government officials will gather this week to discuss ways of combating family violence.

The National Family Violence Networking Symposium will focus on child abuse, the impact of spousal abuse on children, and the role of professionals, such as social workers, in breaking the cycle of violence.

Dr Sudha Nair, an assistant professor in the National University of Singapore's department of social work, said broaching the subject of children in abusive families is important 'not only for the children's sake, but for the parent's sake as well'.

She said if parents realised the harm they were doing their children through spousal abuse, they might stop.

A single violent episode can have a profound impact on children, she said.

According to a pilot study she conducted for the Centre for Promoting Alternatives to Violence, children as young as three remembered incidents of abuse.

Abusers on the other hand, were not aware of the psychological impact of spousal abuse on a child.

The 2006 study of nine families shows that the abuser and the child had different recollections of the event.

For example, children remembered the details of a fight more vividly than the abuser or the victim.

Although only nine families were studied, Dr Sudha said she hopes to continue the research once she gets approval from the Institutional Review Board, which monitors the ethical aspects of research involving human subjects.

Said Dr Sudha: 'There is a general lack of awareness that the parent's behaviour has impact.If parents become aware that they are affecting the child, then that might make a difference. We hope it might make them stop the abuse.'

Organised by the Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports and the Singapore Police Force, the conference will be held this Thursday.

This article was first published in The Straits Times on Sep 30, 2008.

 

 
STORY INDEX
 
  No to frivolous snaps of womb
   
 
  Abusing spouse - kids hurt too
   
 
  Big perks soon for Aussie parents
   
 
  3-D snapshots from the womb
   
 
  More than skin deep scarring
   
 
  Full-time parents deserve praise
   
 
  When a child acts up
   
 
  Sleepless tots
   
 
  Sexually active teen girls at more risk of infection
   
 
  When to talk about the birds and the bees
   
We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg
   

Search: