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Thursday, July 28, 2011

US Child Maltreatment 2009 Statistics

 
Child Maltreatment 2009
U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
Administration for Children and Families
Administration on Children, Youth and Families
Children's Bureau

....Victims in the age group of birth to 1 year had the highest rate of
victimization at 20.6 per 1,000 children of the same age group in the
national population.

Victimization was split between the sexes with boys accounting for 48.2
percent and girls accounting for 51.1 percent. Less than 1 percent of victims
had an unknown sex.

Eighty-seven percent of victims were comprised of three races or
ethnicities—African-American (22.3%), Hispanic (20.7%), and White (44.0%).

What were the most common types of maltreatment?

As in prior years, the greatest proportion of children suffered from
neglect. A child may have suffered from multiple forms of maltreatment and was
counted once for each maltreatment type. CPS investigations or assessments
determined that for unique victims:

More than 75 percent (78.3%) suffered neglect;
More than 15 percent (17.8%) suffered physical abuse;
Less than 10 percent (9.5%) suffered sexual abuse; and
Less than 10 percent (7.6%) suffered from psychological maltreatment.

....Child fatalities are the most tragic consequence of maltreatment. Yet,
each year children die from abuse and neglect. Forty-nine States reported
a total of 1,676 fatalities. Based on these data, a nationally estimated
1,770 children died from abuse and neglect.

....Four-fifths (80.9%) of duplicate perpetrators of child maltreatment
were parents, and another 6.3 percent were other relatives of the victim;

Of the duplicate perpetrators who were parents, four-fifths (84.7%) were
the biological parents of the victim;

Women comprised a larger percentage of all unique perpetrators than men,
53.8 percent compared to 44.4 percent;

and Four-fifths (83.2%) of all unique perpetrators were between the ages
of 20 and 49 years.
 

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