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New Study: Spanked Kids = Messed-Up Grownups

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Tuesday, July 31, 2012   

PHOENIX - Physical punishment of children increases the chances of mood, anxiety and personality disorders, and of alcohol and drug abuse in adulthood, according to a study in the latest Journal of Pediatrics. Canadian researchers using data from nearly 35,000 American adults found that from 2 percent to 7 percent of mental disorders were attributable to physical punishment.

To many experts, including executive director Cyndi Scott of the Coalition Against Child Abuse and Neglect, this reinforces what they already know about spanking.

"It's not going to be beneficial to the child, or to the parent, for them to use any kind of physical force. So, we would not recommend people hitting children."

The alternative, say some authorities on parenting, is talk, talking to children both before and after they engage in behavior that is not approved. Corporal punishment remains legal in Arizona for parents and schools, though the vast majority of school districts have banned the practice.

Marcy Safyer runs the Parenting Institute at Adelphi University. She points out that parents have alternatives to physical punishment.

"They need to be - there's the term - 'bigger, stronger, wiser and kind.' They need to pick the child up from whatever it is and remove them, sit with them until the child calms down, and then say to them, 'Let's talk about why I don't want you to do that.'"

Cyndi Scott acknowledges that a lot of parents still see spanking as an effective way of discouraging misbehavior.

"There are times where people feel like, 'Oh, that's ridiculous. I was raised - my parents spanked me, you know, I should be able to spank my child.' But we also know - we see children who have been harmed by adults, and it can lead to trauma."

Safyer says parents should not be a cause of fear for a child, especially from birth to age three, when brain development is at its most rapid and crucial phase.

"During that time, a child develops the foundation and capabilities that all the rest of their development builds upon. And their parents' job at that time is to be a secure base that a child can come back to when they're anxious and frightened in the world."

Spanking is outlawed in more than 30 countries. It is legal for parents to use physical punishment on their children in the U.S., although laws exist that define what crosses the line and must be reported as abuse.




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