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Child Sexual Abuse

Overview, Causes, & Risk Factors

Child sexual abuse is any experience during childhood or adolescence that involves inappropriate sexual attention from another person. This person is usually an adult but can also be an older child, teenager, or even a person the same age.

Sexual abuse can take place within the family by a parent, stepparent, sibling, or other relative. It also can occur outside the family by a friend, neighbor, caregiver, teacher, or random molester. Children are often afraid to tell anyone what has happened. A recent study of girls in 9th through 12th grade found that one out of five girls were physically and/or sexually abused by a dating partner.

There are three types of sexual abuse: nontouching sexual abuse, touching sexual abuse, and sexual exploitation.

Nontouching sexual abuse includes:

  • deliberately exposing a child to the act of sexual intercourse
  • exposing a child to pornographic material
  • indecent exposure or exhibitionism
  • masturbating in front of a child
  • Touching sexual abuse can include:

  • any penetration of a child's vagina or anus by an object that doesn't have a medical purpose
  • fondling
  • making a child touch an adult's sexual organs
  • Sexual exploitation can include:

  • engaging a child for the purposes of prostitution
  • using a child to film, photograph, or model pornography
  • What are the causes and risks of the injury?

    Sexual abuse happens to children of all religions, ethnic origins, and income levels. Often the abuser is someone the child knows, rather than a stranger. A person who was sexually abused as a child is more likely to become an abuser as an older child or adult.

    Experts know that adolescents who have been abused are at higher risk for other health problems. However, we do not yet know whether the health problems came before the abuse or if the abuse increased the risk for the health problem. These problems include the following:

  • adolescent pregnancy
  • alcohol use, including binge drinking
  • cocaine abuse
  • risky sexual behaviors, including intercourse before age 15 and multiple partners
  • smoking
  • suicidal attempts or thoughts
  • unhealthy weight management, including eating disorders

  • Symptoms & Signs

    What are the signs and symptoms of the injury?

    It is not always easy for an adult to recognize when sexual abuse has taken place. A child who has been sexually abused may:

  • act seductively
  • be excessively curious about sex
  • develop frequent urinary tract infections
  • engage in inappropriate sex play
  • feel threatened by physical contact, closeness, or a certain person
  • have bruises, bleeding, pain, or itching in the genital area
  • have nightmares
  • have poor self-esteem
  • have a premature understanding of sex
  • have separation anxiety
  • lack confidence
  • masturbate excessively
  • wet or soil his or her bed

  • Diagnosis & Tests

    How is the injury recognized?

    An abuser can make the child very fearful of telling anyone else. An adult should believe a child who says he or she has been sexually abused. Children rarely lie about sexual abuse.

    When sexual abuse is suspected, the child should be taken to a healthcare provider who is trained to deal with and recognize sexual abuse. He or she will ask the child to describe what happened. He or she also will look for injuries to the mouth, rectum, and vaginal area, if the child is a girl. If the abuse took place recently, the healthcare provider will do a special examination to check for sperm. Child protective services need to be notified.


    Prevention & Expectations

    What can be done to prevent the injury?

    Parents need to warn children about possible risks. Children should be taught about good and bad touches. They need to be told that no one should touch their private areas. Children should be told not to keep secrets from their parents, even if someone has threatened to harm them or their parents.

    The best way to prevent abuse is to teach children how to solve problems without using abuse. Teenagers and young adults should be taught that it's never OK to abuse a partner. Parents and healthcare providers should provide teens with information and statistics about dating violence. The teens should be given specific information about behaviors that are part of dating violence. They should be encouraged to discuss any issues or concerns with a parent or other appropriate adult.

    Since health concerns such as cocaine use are associated with a higher risk for partner abuse, healthcare providers should address dating violence when treating teens with these health concerns. Careful screening can help identify at-risk teens and provide the opportunity to stop the abuse cycle.


    Treatment & Monitoring

    What are the treatments for the injury?

    Child protective services monitor sexual abuse cases. Sexually abused children and their families need professional evaluation and treatment. Child and adolescent psychiatrists can help abused children regain a sense of self-esteem. They can help them cope with their feelings of guilt about the abuse and begin the process of overcoming the trauma. Individual psychotherapy and group counseling may help. Much of the healing for many survivors takes place in a support group of other survivors. There is strength, comfort, and hope in hearing the stories of others who share their pain.

    Antidepressant medicines may be tried, but they are not usually as successful in treating depression in children as they are in adolescents and adults.

    The child should be checked for sexually transmitted diseases. Girls of childbearing age should be tested for pregnancy.

    What are the side effects of the treatments?

    Antidepressant medicines may cause mild and usually temporary side effects in some people. The most common side effects are:

  • agitation
  • constipation
  • dizziness
  • drowsiness
  • dry mouth
  • nausea
  • A person on antidepressant medicines needs to have blood levels monitored frequently.

    What happens after treatment for the injury?

    Long-term effects can include posttraumatic stress disorder. Although this nervous disorder can have many causes, in this case it is a result of physical, mental, or sexual violence. The victim may have the following conditions:

  • depression
  • feelings of anxiety
  • feelings of isolation
  • irritability
  • nightmares and flashbacks
  • a tendency to avoid other people
  • Children who have been sexually abused usually develop low self-esteem, a feeling of worthlessness, and an abnormal perspective on sexuality. They may become withdrawn and mistrustful of adults and attempt suicide. Some sexually abused children become child abusers or prostitutes in later years. They are more at risk of abusing alcohol or other drugs to dull the pain.

    A person who has been sexually abused may need years of psychotherapy to come to terms with what has happened. Therapy is most often long-term. It can be difficult for an adult to come to terms with sexual abuse that occurred when he or she was a child. It may result in changes in the abused person's life. In some cases, divorce results when a spouse can't live with a partner's pain and becomes frustrated at not being able to do anything about it.



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