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The Effects of Childhood Maltreatment on Brain Development

The Effects of Childhood Maltreatment on Brain Development
The Effects of Childhood Maltreatment on Brain Development
KEY CONCEPTS • Childhood maltreatment can be defined as ‘any acts of commission or omission by a parent or other caregiver that results in harm, potential for harm, or threat of harm to a child’ (Child Maltreatment Surveillance, 2008). • These acts do not have to be intentional in order to be classed as maltreatment. Acts of commission include various forms of abuse: physical, emotional or sexual abuse (Leeb, 2008). • Physical abuse refers to the cause of a physical injury by nonaccidental means i.e. bruises caused by spanking. Sexual abuse refers to attempted or actual sexual contact or exposure to sexual stimuli i.e. exposure to pornographic films, rape. Emotional maltreatment is referred to when a child’s emotional needs are not met i.e. witnessing violence between caregivers, constant screaming or cursing at the child or when a caregiver is insensitive to a child’s developmental level and needs i.e. a school-aged child is not allowed to play with friends (English & the LONGSCAN Investigators, 1997). • Acts of omission include various forms of neglect that result in failure to provide for a child’s emotional, physical, medical or educational needs or a lack of adequate supervision of a child (Leeb, 2008). Examples of neglect include having children not attend school i.e.educational neglect) or leaving the child with an intoxicated caregiver i.e. lack of adequate supervision; (English & the LONGSCAN Investigators, 1997). • Children often experience multiple types of maltreatment (Herrenkohl & Herrenkohl, 2009). One exception might be the institutional deprivation experienced by Romanian children in orphanages under the Ceausescu regime that marks an especially severe case of global i.e. social, physical and emotional neglect
Childhood maltreatment, institutional deprivation, brain development
Routledge
Golm, Dennis
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Kreppner, Jana
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Golm, Dennis
ae337f61-561e-4d44-9cf3-3e5611c7b484
Kreppner, Jana
6a5f447e-1cfe-4654-95b4-e6f89b0275d6

Golm, Dennis and Kreppner, Jana (2020) The Effects of Childhood Maltreatment on Brain Development. In, Child and Adolescent Mental Health: Theory and Practice. 3rd Edition ed. Routledge. (In Press)

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

KEY CONCEPTS • Childhood maltreatment can be defined as ‘any acts of commission or omission by a parent or other caregiver that results in harm, potential for harm, or threat of harm to a child’ (Child Maltreatment Surveillance, 2008). • These acts do not have to be intentional in order to be classed as maltreatment. Acts of commission include various forms of abuse: physical, emotional or sexual abuse (Leeb, 2008). • Physical abuse refers to the cause of a physical injury by nonaccidental means i.e. bruises caused by spanking. Sexual abuse refers to attempted or actual sexual contact or exposure to sexual stimuli i.e. exposure to pornographic films, rape. Emotional maltreatment is referred to when a child’s emotional needs are not met i.e. witnessing violence between caregivers, constant screaming or cursing at the child or when a caregiver is insensitive to a child’s developmental level and needs i.e. a school-aged child is not allowed to play with friends (English & the LONGSCAN Investigators, 1997). • Acts of omission include various forms of neglect that result in failure to provide for a child’s emotional, physical, medical or educational needs or a lack of adequate supervision of a child (Leeb, 2008). Examples of neglect include having children not attend school i.e.educational neglect) or leaving the child with an intoxicated caregiver i.e. lack of adequate supervision; (English & the LONGSCAN Investigators, 1997). • Children often experience multiple types of maltreatment (Herrenkohl & Herrenkohl, 2009). One exception might be the institutional deprivation experienced by Romanian children in orphanages under the Ceausescu regime that marks an especially severe case of global i.e. social, physical and emotional neglect

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Accepted/In Press date: 2020
Keywords: Childhood maltreatment, institutional deprivation, brain development

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 446033
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/446033
PURE UUID: ddf1edb1-a7ac-4cef-9dd3-77522cebbe91
ORCID for Dennis Golm: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2950-7935
ORCID for Jana Kreppner: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3527-9083

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Date deposited: 19 Jan 2021 17:33
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:35

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Contributors

Author: Dennis Golm ORCID iD
Author: Jana Kreppner ORCID iD

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