Dr. Bessel van der Kolk, pro­fes­sor of psy­chi­a­try at Boston University School of Medicine, recent­ly dis­cussed the impact of vio­lence on chil­dren, com­par­ing its effects to prob­lems faced by sol­diers return­ing from war. He not­ed, For every sol­dier return­ing from Iraq and Afghanistan with symp­toms of depres­sion or PTSD [post-trau­mat­ic stress dis­or­der], there are around 10 chil­dren in the United States who are trau­ma­tized by expo­sure to fam­i­ly vio­lence, sex­u­al abuse, neglect and assault, with con­se­quences com­pa­ra­ble to those of adult expo­sure to war-zone vio­lence.” Many abused chil­dren, if not prop­er­ly cared for, will exhib­it behav­ioral and psy­cho­log­i­cal prob­lems. Dr. Bessel expressed con­cern that fund­ing from such treat­ment might be with­drawn: Untreated, trau­ma­tized chil­dren become fail­ing adults who pop­u­late our jails and over­whelm our human ser­vices agen­cies. Cutting the devel­op­ment of effec­tive treat­ments will pro­duce many years of increas­ing costs and unquan­tifi­able human misery.”

(B. van der Kolk, Post-Traumatic Childhood,” New York Times, May 10, 2011). See Mental Illness and the Death Penalty.

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