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Posted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 12:34 pm
Report finds one in three women abused 20 Jun 2013
"More than one third of all women around the world have been physically or sexually abused according to a new report by the World Health Organisation.
In what it billed as the first-ever systematic study of global data on the prevalence of violence against women and its health impact, the UN agency said on Thursday that 30 percent worldwide faced such abuse at the hands of their partners.
"These to me are shocking statistics," said Flavia Bustreo, head of the WHO's family, women's and children's health division.
"It's also shocking that this phenomenon cuts across the entire world," she told reporters.
The WHO blamed taboos that prevent victims from coming forward, failings in medical and justice systems, and norms that mean men and women may see violence as acceptable.
'Shocking figures'
The findings were extrapolated from figures provided by 81 countries which maintain data, and did not single out individual nations.
The scale of abuse was highest in Asia, where data from Bangladesh, East Timor, India, Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Thailand showed that 37.7 percent of women were affected.
Next was the Middle East, where prevalence averaged at 37 percent. Sub-Saharan Africa followed, with 36.6 percent.
An average of 23.2 percent were affected in a group of high-income countries including North America, the European Union, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.
"These data really show the tremendous toll violence has on the health of women," said Claudia Garcia-Moren, a WHO specialist on gender, reproductive rights, sexual health and adolescence.
Underlining the impact of such abuse, the WHO said that globally, 38 percent of female murder victims were killed by their partners.
In addition, it said, violence also leaves scars long after bruises disappear and broken bones heal.
Women with a violent partner were twice as likely to suffer from depression and develop an alcohol problem, compared to women who did not experience abuse.
Victims of violence were also found to be far more likely to contract a range of sexually-transmitted diseases, from syphilis to HIV.
The study also flagged the higher likelihood of abused women having an unwanted pregnancy, an abortion, or an underweight baby - and their children were more likely to become abusers or victims in adulthood." http://www.aljazeera.com/video/asia-pacific/2013/06/2013620172350609216.html
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Posted: Sun Jun 23, 2013 11:34 am
Well, the reason why their babies might become more likely an abuser or abused, is because of epigenetics.
And it makes sense less are abused in more free countries. I think overall itll be on a decline for the free countries because epigenetics lasts multiple generations Im sure.
Epigenetics is basically which genes are turned on and off, and when they are turned on or off and in what circumstances.
Its one reason why im thinking of making a baby with a lady who is as fond of neuroplasticity as I am, or more fond, and one who is preferably not white like me.
but Id like to know how much men are abused, from men, and from women.
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