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Emotional, Physical, and Sexual Child Abuse in China: Prevalence and Psychological ConsequenceView attachment 19568
Disturbing images of Mexican children training with firearms to prepare to serve criminal gangs
Human rights defenders have expressed concern over the organization of training to train children to use weapons, after disturbing images of children taken in a violent area of Mexico were shared. The minors, among whom there was also a five-year-old, have appeared with faces half...telegrafi.com
Michelle Jin, Qian Wang, Xiaojing Xu, Jie Zhong
School of Psychological and Cognitive Science, Beijing Key Laboratory of Behavior and Mental Health, Peking University, Beijing, China.
DOI: 10.4236/psych.2021.128083 PDF HTML XML 581 Downloads 6,678 Views
Abstract
The present study aimed to examine different degrees of child abuse and related psychological consequences in the mainland of China. A Chinese version of the Norvold Abuse Questionnaire was administered to 981 Chinese college students. The prevalence rates of child emotional abuse were 16.4%, 8.8%, and 6.9% for the mild, moderate, and severe levels of abuse, respectively, and those of physical abuse were 34.3%, 19.3%, and 3.1%, respectively. Furthermore, 4.4% of the participants in the mild sexual abuse group reported having had no genital contact and 1.0% of them reported having experienced emotional humiliation. The prevalence rates of moderate and severe sexual abuse were 2.4% and .8%. More males were found to suffer from moderate or severe levels of emotional abuse than females. Similarly, more males reported physical abuse than females across all degrees of severity. Mild and severe physical abuse had a larger current effect on males than on females, whereas the impact of moderate physical abuse was greater on females. Overall, Chinese college students reported significantly fewer sexual abuses than similar samples in Western countries. Additionally, more females suffered from mild sexual abuse than males. These findings suggest a potential influence of gender and culture.
Emotional, Physical, and Sexual Child Abuse in China Prevalence and Psychological Consequence
Examining child abuse and psychological consequences in China. Prevalence rates of emotional, physical, and sexual abuse among Chinese college students. Gender and cultural influences explored.
www.scirp.org
Now child abuse exists every sadly but tell me what has do do that with BYD slavery conditions in Brazil to the workers they were Chinese not even Brazilians?
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