Physical and sexual abuse of children in the West Midlands
- PMID: 9134259
- DOI: 10.1016/s0145-2134(96)00172-x
Physical and sexual abuse of children in the West Midlands
Abstract
Objective: To describe the convicted and cautioned abusers and the nature of the physical and sexual abuse of children using a legal classification in an attempt to formulate operational criteria for future comparative studies.
Design: A retrospective sequential survey of all cautioned and convicted physical and sexual abusers between the January 1, 1988 and June 30, 1994.
Setting: The West Midlands police jurisdiction.
Subjects: 1,113 abused children and 964 abusers.
Results: The majority of all abuse involved a single child. Many abusers lived in the same household and were in a position of trust or quasi-trust. When strangers committed abuse, the majority of abuse was sexual. A third of the abusers were unemployed. Multiple abuse tended to be sexual and was perpetrated by men. The physical abuse of young children tended to be committed by younger women. No women over the age of 40 had sexually abused a child. Of the children under 12 months, 1.5% had been sexually abused and 8.5% had been physically abused. The greater proportion of physical abuse had occurred in children under 9 years of age whereas sexual abuse was perpetrated more often in girls aged 9 to 11 years. No girls were murdered in this survey. Significantly more boys had been buggered.
Conclusion: This preliminary study is representative of all the cautioned and convicted cases within the selected 5-year period and obtained from a source of material hitherto unavailable. Many of the findings of this preliminary study are in line with previous studies. Substantial descriptive information has been obtained on a selected population of cautioned or convicted abusers. Further studies may indicate that the cautioned and convicted are more representative of abusers generally than previously thought. Expanded studies may eventually produce particularized profiles of both abusers and the abused, but even the limited guidance provided by this preliminary study will give some assistance to law enforcement agencies in detection and child protection agencies in identifying children at risk and targeting resources more efficiently.
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