Childhood Sexual Abuse And Eating Disorders

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Summary Although childhood sexual abuse has been underreported, as much as 20% of the general population has been estimated to be a victim of some form of sexual abuse (Goldfarb, 1987), suggesting that a significant amount of data have been collected and cases has been solved. Thompson (1994) mentions that there was little attention on the relationship between child sexual abuse and eating disorders, until the mid-1980s (p. 46). The public became more aware of how prevalence child sexual abuse and eating disorders are among women when studies found that ten times as many females as males are reported to be victims of sexual abuse and the same female-dominated ratio reported in cases of anorexia nervosa and bulimia (Goldfarb, 1987). As we have seen there are many contributing risking factors that influence the way children deal with sexual abuse. When a child is sexually abuse they are literally being stripped away from their bodies which result in them not doing some of the things they usually do. Having this feeling and being afraid can send someone to look for ways to escape. As a result eating disorders begin to develop because just like people who suffer from sexual abuse those who suffer from eating disorders also want to leave their bodies. The only solution becomes food as a source of comfort. Researchers suggest that sexual abuse produces confusion and make children afraid of their abuser. In fact, one study reported to feelings of self-esteem, worthlessness, humiliation, and depression (Goldfarb, 1987, Thompson, 1994; & Waller, 1991), which is feelings associated with those who suffer from eating disorders, can rise when children encounter this trauma. Children become afraid and confused of what had occurred thus lead th... ... middle of paper ... ...ms of sexual assault and eating disorders however there are some limitations when dealing with patients like this. First, many children don’t get a chance to receive the help they need because According Faller (1990) many child protective agencies handle cases where the parent is involved with the maltreatment. This is very problematic because parents are supposed to be there for their children not harm them. Second, the issue becomes hard to treat because usually there are no physical signs when a child becomes sexually abuse thus relying on word of mouth from victims, witnesses, and perpetrators (Faller, 1990). When children are harmed due to their loved ones we see that they become afraid to tell someone their story which results in many underreported cases being reported. Therefor making society more aware of the prevalence of these issue needs to be examined.

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