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pupils at Langata Primary Nairobi staging a demo |
1. Physical effects
2. Behavioral effects
3. Physiological effects
4. Economical effects
1. Physical effects
Physical effect is felt when children's physical development is endangered. It is common when children are hurt during demonstrations, sexual abuse, thorough beatings, maltreatment during infancy, motor impairment, fatal head trauma among others.
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child labor is a common occurrence today |
2. Behavioral effects
Studies have shown 25 % of children who once in their life time experienced abuse are normally at an increased rate of engaging in alcoholism, smoking, drugs abuse, robbery, political unrest during their middle adulthood (mainly between 15 to 25 years). This is in search of a revenge from the community that mistreated them in the yester-years and as a means seeking attention.Studies have found abused and neglected children are at a risk of experiencing problems such as delinquency, teen pregnancy, and low academic achievement. Similarly, a longitudinal study found that physically abused children were at greater risk of being arrested as juveniles. This same study also found that abused youth were less likely to have graduated from high school and more likely to have been a teen parent. A National Institute of Justice study indicated that being abused or neglected as a child increased the likelihood of arrest as a juvenile by 59 percent. Abuse and neglect also increased the likelihood of adult criminal behavior by 28 percent and violent crime by 30 percent.
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police use exessive force to cool pupils in Nairobi |
If young adults who had been abused met the diagnostic criteria for at least one psychiatric disorder at age 21. These young adults normally exhibit many problems, including depression, anxiety, eating disorders, and suicide attempts.In addition to physical and developmental problems, the stress of chronic abuse may result in anxiety and may make victims more vulnerable to problems such as post-traumatic stress disorder, conduct disorder, and learning, attention, and memory difficulties.
4. Economical effects
A case study of the United Satates of amerca budget allocation of the 2008, The total lifetime economic burden resulting from new cases of fatal and nonfatal child maltreatment was approximately $124 billion in 2010 dollars. This economic burden rivals the cost of other high profile public health problems, such as stroke and Type 2 diabetes. Other costs are incurred as childhood health care costs, adult medical costs, child welfare costs, criminal justice costs and provision of special education.
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protecting the right of children is for everyone |
But before our police do anything are they normally aware of this..???
ReplyDeletethis are kind of stories we need from blogger! not incitement
ReplyDelete