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February 28, 2008
DURHAM, N.H. -– Children
who are spanked or victims of other corporal punishment are more
likely to have sexual problems as a teen or adult, according to new
research presented today by Murray Straus, co-director of the Family
Research Laboratory at the University of New Hampshire.
Widely considered the
foremost researcher in his field, Straus presented his new research
findings at the American Psychological Association’s Summit on
Violence and Abuse in Relationships: Connecting Agendas and Forging
New Directions held Feb. 28 and 29 at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in
Bethesda, MD.
Straus analyzed the results
of four studies and found that spanking and other corporal
punishment by parents is associated with an increased probability of
three sexual problems as a teen or adult:
• Verbally and physically coercing a dating partner to have sex.
• Risky sex such as premarital sex without a condom.
• Masochistic sex such as being aroused by being spanked when
having sex.
“These results, together
with the results of more than 100 other studies, suggest that
spanking is one of the roots of relationship violence and mental
health problems. Because there is 93 percent agreement between
studies that investigated harmful side effects of spanking, and
because over 90 percent of U.S. parents spank toddlers, the
potential benefits for prevention of sexual and relationship
violence is large,” Straus says.
“Furthermore, because
other research shows spanking is not more effective than other
discipline methods, there is no need to expose children to the
harmful effects of spanking. We can help prevent mental health
problems and relationship violence from happening by a national
health policy recommending never spanking,” he says.
Coerced Sex
A survey of more than 14,000
university students in 32 nations found that 29 percent of the male
and 21 percent of the female students had verbally coerced sex from
another person. Coerced sex involves insisting on sex when the
partner does not want to, or threatening to end the relationship if
the partner does not have sex.
The percentages of those who
physically forced sex were much lower: 1.7 percent of the men and
1.2 percent of the women said they had used physical force, such as
holding down the partner or hitting a partner to make them have sex.
“The most important
finding of this study is that each increase of one step on a
four-step measure of corporal punishment was associated with a 10
percent increase in the probability of verbal sexual coercion by men
and a 12 percent increase in sexual coercion by women,” Straus
says. “The relation of corporal punishment to physically forcing
sex was even stronger. Each increase of one step in corporal
punishment was associated with a 33 percent increase in the
probability of men forcing sex and a 27 percent increase in the
probability of women doing this.”
Risky Sex
In the second study, Straus
analyzed the same sample of university students, but focused on
whether they had insisted on sex without using a condom. Straus
found that 15 percent of the men and 13 percent of the women had
insisted on sex without a condom at least once in the past year.
Using the four-step corporal
punishment scale, Straus found that of the group with the lowest
score on the corporal punishment scale, 12.5 percent had insisted on
unprotected sex. In contrast, 25 percent of students in the highest
corporal punishment group engaged in this type of risky sex.
The third study analyzed
data on 440 students in a New Hampshire high school. The students
were divided into five groups, ranging from those who were never
spanked to those whose parents used corporal punishment even when
they were 13 years old and older. The study evaluated eight
indicators of risky sex, such as more than one sex partner.
Straus found that students
who had experienced corporal punishment had engaged in more risky
sexual behavior than students who had not been spanked. From this
study, Straus concludes that corporal punishment weakens the bond
between the child and the parents. He believes that this alienation
from parents may make teenagers less likely to avoid sex and less
likely to follow safe sex practices.
Masochistic Sex
In the fourth study, Straus
asked 207 students at three colleges about whether they had ever
been sexually aroused by masochistic sex: imagining that they were
being tied up when having sex, engaging in rough sex, or by
spanking, and if they had been sexually aroused by actually doing
these three things.
"The core idea of this
study is that being spanked by loving parents confuses love with
violence, which increases the probability that violence will be part
of making love,” Straus says.
The study found that 75
percent of students who had been spanked a lot by their parents were
sexually aroused by masochistic sex. In contrast, 40 percent of
students who had never been spanked were interested in masochistic
sex.
"What is new about this
study is a scientific test of the idea that being spanked as a child
inclines people to want to be spanked when having sex, and that this
is especially likely to be true when there is a combination of lots
of spanking and lots of love," Straus says.
Reducing Spanking
To reduce the use of
corporal punishment, Straus recommends that the American
Psychological Association, the U.S. Children's Bureau, and other
organizations publicize a recommendation that parents should never
spank.
“However, to make this
work, we need to start by informing professionals who advise parents
about the evidence-base for that policy. They need this information
to be able to give appropriate information and help to parents about
replacing spanking with positive discipline to correct
misbehavior,” he says.
Since 1975, the Family
Research Laboratory has devoted itself primarily to understanding
family violence and the impact of violence in families. As public
and professional interest in family violence has grown, so has the
need for more reliable knowledge. The lab has tried to fill that
need in a variety of ways: through comprehensive literature reviews,
new theories, and methodologically sound studies. Researchers at the
lab pioneered many of the techniques that have enabled social
scientists to estimate directly the scope of family violence.
Straus is the co-director
of the Family Research Laboratory and professor of sociology at the
University of New Hampshire. He has studied spanking by large and
representative samples of American parents since 1969. He is the
author of “Beating The Devil Out Of Them: Corporal Punishment In
American Families And Its Effects On Children.” He has been
president of three scientific societies including the National
Council On Family Relations, and an advisor to the National
Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation. Much of
his research on spanking can be downloaded from http://pubpages.unh.edu/~mas2.
Contact: Lori
Wright
603-862-0574
UNH Media Relations
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