When ‘love’ hurts

Study finds dating abuse rate is growing, starting younger

Dating abuse among teenagers has reached alarming levels, and many parents aren’t taking the necessary steps to help curb it, experts say.

Amy Bonomi, in conjunction with Seattle’s Group Health Research Institute, wrote a new study that surveyed college students younger than 21 about their dating history from ages 13 to 19.

“Nearly two-thirds of both boys and girls reported dating violence during their teenage years,” says Bonomi, associate professor of human development and family science at Ohio State University.

“One-third of teens who said they were abused reported two or more abusive partners. More than half of teens said they had multiple occurrences of abuse.

Two-thirds reported violent victimization.”

Her findings square with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics, which show 1 in

4 adolescents report verbal, phys

ical, emotional or sexual abuse

each year, and 1 in 10 report being a victim of physical dating abuse. Arkansas is among the states where teens reported the highest levels of abuse, with 14.1 percent or more stating that they had been hit, slapped or physically hurt by a boyfriend or girlfriend in the 12 months prior to the survey, according to figures at ncsl.

org/issues-research/health/ teen-dating-violence.aspx.

At least 19 states have laws that encourage or mandate school boards to develop curricula on teen dating violence, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Arkansas is not among them.

Having such curricula is a good start, Bonomi says, but it’s hardly enough.

“Schools, health care providers, parents, peers, church organizations all should be involved in this,” she says.

Dating abuse is defined by the CDC as the physical, sexual or psychological/emotional violence that occurs within a dating relationship.

Among the behaviors reported by males and females are yelling, swearing, insults, controlling behavior, pressured sex, stalking, being slapped or hit, and being threatened with violence.

Abuse during the teen years, the CDC says, can lead to lifelong unhealthy relationship practices, disrupt normal development, and lead to chronic mental and physical health conditions in adulthood.

PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT

Parents, experts say, play a particularly powerful role in helping their teens avoid abuse - and, equally important, escape it.

“Parents need to be involved all the way around - knowing what their kids are doing, but also teaching them necessary skills,” says UCLA-based social worker Barrie Levy, author of In Love and In Danger: A Teen’s Guide to Breaking Free of Abusive Relationships (Seal Press).

“Even as kids reach adolescence - 13, 14, 15 - and the importance of their peers becomes more primary, parts of their brains are still developing,” Levy says. “Teenagers don’t have the maturity to think ahead in terms of consequences, good judgment, good decisions, their own safety.”

These are the very skills, though, that could prove critical during the years when most kids start experimenting withrelationships.

Here are three critical steps to steer your teen toward healthy dating relationships: 1. GET INVOLVED

“Parents are moving further out of their kids’ lives as kids push them away in favorof technology and social networking, and the parents feel less significant and less useful,” says psychotherapist Jill Murray, author of But He Never Hit Me: The Devastating Cost of Non-Physical Abuse to Girls and Women (iUniverse).

“They feel like they’re insignificant because their kids’ lives are moving so fast. So they just sort of give up or take a back seat.”

This, Murray says, is a grave mistake.

“I see a lot of teens in my practice, and I lecture to more than 100,000 teens a year,” she says. “They want their parents to be involved in their lives and they want their parents to be significant and they don’t want to disappoint their parents.”

As soon as intimate relationships appear on your teen’s horizon, start a dialogue about how your child is being treated, wants to be treated, sees others being treated.

Remember, they’re new at this and may not know what’s normal and healthy.

  1. WATCH FOR SIGNS

Don’t wait for signs of physical abuse before stepping in.

“While it’s true that all physically abusive relationships have a history of emotional and verbal abuse, it’s not true that all verbally and emotionally abusive relationships become physical,” Murray says.“The physical signs may never appear, but that doesn’t mean abuse isn’t happening.”

Significant deviations from the way your child used to act should give you particular pause. A few of the more common signs:

Dropping activities or hobbies because the boyfriend or girlfriend doesn’t want attention diverted from the relationship.

Wearing markedly different clothing. “Especially if a boyfriend is very jealous, a girl will start dressing in very baggy clothes or wearing less makeup because she’s afraid of looking sexy,” Levy says.

Seeing friends less often. “Friends your child has had foryears … aren’t coming around anymore,” Murray says. “This is especially true with girls who have become increasingly abusive and aggressive toward boyfriends. They don’t want [the boys] to see their friends.”

Your child underperforms at school or other endeavors. “If the boyfriend isn’t having a lot of success in his life, he may try to interfere with her success and tell her to stop doing well and make her feel bad for doing well,” Levy says.

You witness alarmingly frequent check-ins. “The boyfriend or girlfriend is doing a lot of checking up, intruding on time with friends and family, following, stalking, sending 10 texts that all have to be answered immediately,” Levy says.

Your child’s overall mood changes dramatically. “Your child is suddenly angry or moody a lot,” Murray says. “She starts taking the blame for everything. Feels like a bad person a lot. Shows extreme jealousy.”

  1. TAKE INTELLIGENT ACTION

If you discover your child is being abused, it can be tempting to issue a firm directive, but that’s not always the best approach.

Better to come up with a plan together, Levy says, so that you teach self-protection skills in the process: “I use myobservations and my concern to ask direct, clear questions: ‘I notice every time he texts you, you get scared. Are you being hurt in any way? My main goal is that you’re not hurt. I want that to be your goal too. Let’s think about how we can handle this.’”

Physical abuse is a different story. “If you see signs of physical abuse, then your child has been assaulted, and assault is a crime,” Murray says. “That’s when you tell your child, ‘You’ve been assaulted, and I’m calling the police.’ And you absolutely call the police. If your child has bruises or marks … it’s game over.”

SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY

Relational abuse via text message is “huge, huge, huge,” says psychotherapist and domestic violence counselor Jill Murray.

“The majority of text abuse happens between midnight and 5 a.m.,” she says. “Parents think their kids are asleep, but that’s not the case.”

Murray endorses a firm rule of not using cell phones overnight.

“There’s no reason on earth why a kid’s phone should be on between midnight and 5 a.m.,” she says. “Parents should absolutely have their kids’ phones overnight.”

Family, Pages 34 on 03/20/2013

Upcoming Events