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Psychodynamic Factors in Child Abuse (From The Battered Child, P 81-114, 1987, Ray E Helfer and Ruth S Kempe, eds. -- See NCJ-111195)

NCJ Number
111200
Author(s)
B Steele
Date Published
1987
Length
34 pages
Annotation
This review of the psychodynamic factors in child abuse discusses the common characteristics of abusive behavior, the circumstances of particular attacks, failure to thrive, the role of the child in abuse and neglect, atypical abuse and infanticide, sexual abuse, and clinical manifestations of abuse.
Abstract
Adult abusers of children are following predictable patterns of parent-child interactions which have been basically determined by the way they themselves were treated as infants. Beginning with poor attachment in the perinatal period, followed in ensuing months and years by unempathic care, unrealistic demands, excessive criticism, and punishment for failure, they developed poor self-esteem, poor basic trust, and fragmented identities. Deeply embedded identifications with their parents and their behaviors, which surface most overtly under stress, lead to repetitions of the ways in which they themselves were treated as children. Thus, the potential for child abuse is created in the parent's childhood before exposure to the wider culture. 64 references. (Author summary modified)