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Survey: 1 in 4 women victims of severe violence

 
 
Reply Thu 15 Dec, 2011 10:58 am
Has such abuse always happened but not reported? Or are men behaving against women more viciously and more often? Is it because women have more freedom in the last 50 years and men don't like it? The report indicates that most women don't report their abuse. Why do men think they have the right to abuse women? BBB

December 14, 2011
Survey: 1 in 4 women victims of severe violence
Associated Press

ATLANTA - It's a startling number: 1 in 4 women surveyed by the government say they were violently attacked by their husbands or boyfriends.

Experts in domestic violence don't find it too surprising, although some aspects of the survey may have led to higher numbers than are sometimes reported.

Even so, a government official who oversaw the research called the results "astounding."

"It's the first time we've had this kind of estimate" on the prevalence of intimate partner violence, said Linda Degutis of the centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The survey, released by the CDC Wednesday, marks the beginning of a new annual project to look at how many women say they've been abused.

One expert called the new report's estimate on rape and attempted rape "extremely high" - with 1 in 5 women saying they were victims. About half of those cases involved intimate partners. No documentation was sought to verify the women's claims, which were made anonymously.

But advocates say the new rape numbers are plausible.

"It's a major problem that often is under-estimated and over-looked," said Linda James, director of health for Futures Without Violence, a San Francisco-based organization that advocates against domestic abuse.

The CDC report is based on a randomized telephone survey of about 9,000 women.

Among the findings:

- As many as 29 million women say they have suffered severe and frightening physical violence from a boyfriend, spouse or other intimate partner. That includes being choked, beaten, stabbed, shot, punched, slammed against something or hurt by hair-pulling.

- That number grows to 36 million if slapping, pushing and shoving are counted.

- Almost half of the women who reported rape or attempted rape said it happened when they were 17 or younger.

Several of the CDC numbers are higher than those of other sources. For example, the CDC study suggests that 1.3 million women have suffered rape, attempted rape or had sex forced on them in the previous year. That statistic is more than seven times greater than what was reported by a Department of Justice household survey conducted last year.

There may be several reasons for the differences, including how the surveys were done, who chose to participate and how "rape" and other types of assault were defined or interpreted, said Shannan Catalano, a statistician with the Bureau of Justice Statistics.
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BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Thu 15 Dec, 2011 11:20 am
@BumbleBeeBoogie,
I couldn't edit this post in time so here is a more complete report: BBB

Almost 1 in 5 Women in U.S. Have Been Sexually Assaulted, CDC Reports
By Molly Peterson - Dec 14, 2011
Bloomberg

Almost one in five U.S. women have been sexually assaulted, according to a study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In a 2010 survey of 16,507 adults, 18.3 percent of women and 1.4 percent of men said they had been victims of rape or attempted rape at some point in their lives, the CDC said today in the first report of its kind.

Victims of domestic violence, rape or stalking are more likely to suffer long-term health problems such as frequent headaches, chronic pain and difficulty sleeping, the CDC report said. Previous research by the health agency suggests such violence costs the U.S. more than $8 billion in medical expenses, mental-health costs and lost productivity.

“The numbers from the first year of data collection are astounding,” Linda Degutis, director of the CDC’s National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, said on a conference call with reporters. The survey is the first to provide national estimates and data from all states on sexual assault, domestic violence and stalking, she said.

About 1.3 million women were sexually assaulted in the 12 months prior to the survey, according to the report. About 5.2 million women, and 1.4 million men, were stalked in that period. More than 12 million women and men said they had been the victims of rape, physical violence or stalking by an intimate partner in the previous year, Degutis said.

“Most of these victims first experienced these types of violence before they were 25 years old, often during their teenage years,” she said.
Previous Report Dwarfed

The CDC figures dwarf a Department of Justice estimate that 188,380 sexual assaults occurred in the U.S. last year, a 24 percent decline from 2009. That study, released in September, surveyed 40,974 U.S. households.

“The measurement of rape or sexual assault represents one of the most serious challenges in the field of victimization research,” the Justice Department said in its report. “Rape and sexual assault remain sensitive subjects that are difficult to ask about in the survey context.”

Studies show most sexual assaults go unreported, in part because victims may feel ashamed, embarrassed, or afraid that police won’t believe an assault occurred, according to the Justice Department’s National Institute of Justice.
State Statistics

Alaska had the highest rate of sexual violence against women in the CDC survey, with 29 percent reporting that they had been raped in their lifetimes. Oregon and Nevada followed, with 27 percent and 26 percent, respectively.

Virginia had the lowest prevalence of rape, with 11 percent of women saying they had been victims of the crime. Tennessee had the second-lowest rate with 13.6 percent, followed by Delaware with 14.2 percent.

Oklahoma had the highest rate of domestic violence, and North Dakota had the lowest. About 49 percent of women surveyed in Oklahoma, and 25 percent in North Dakota, said they had been raped, assaulted or stalked by a partner in their lifetimes.

“The prevalence of sexual and intimate-partner violence is staggering,” Esta Soler, president of Futures Without Violence, a San Francisco-based advocacy group, said today in an e-mail. “Given that victimization is starting younger, we need to do more to prevent violence with intervention programs for children and adolescents.”

More than 42 percent of female rape victims said the crime occurred before they had reached the age of 18, and 80 percent said they were raped before the age of 25, according to the report. Almost 28 percent of male rape victims said the crime occurred when they were 10 years old or younger.

The Atlanta-based CDC developed the study, known as the National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey, with the Defense Department and the National Institute of Justice. The agency began collecting surveillance data last year from English- and Spanish-speaking adults living in the U.S.

The aim of the study is to help officials “stop the violence before it happens,” Degutis said.
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shewolfnm
 
  1  
Reply Thu 15 Dec, 2011 01:03 pm
Im not always sure that I believe that 1 in 4 women are people who have had major violence against them because that would mean almost as high stats for men. That 1 in 4 MEN have done something like that?

ehhhh.. I dunno.

I DO BELIEVE and KNOW that there are a lot of women who have survived life threatening violence , but again.. if its almost EVERY woman you meet, then almost EVERY man is guilty.

i dont buy that.


roger
 
  2  
Reply Thu 15 Dec, 2011 02:43 pm
@shewolfnm,
On the other hand, I've got four fingers and a thumb.

It is possible there are a limited number of thugs running around that have learned how to make themselves attractive to women. I don't even have hearsay evidence to form an opinion from. Neither sex seems very open to discussion on the subject.
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