There are four different types of child abuse in which a child can experience. The first being neglect. Neglect is one of the more common abuse children undergo, but it also is the least researched and receives less attention when compared to the other forms of abuse. Neglect is also very difficult to define due to situations differing. …show more content…
The majority of today’s society views sexual relations between an adult and a child to be disgusting and wrong. Let alone a relationship between one’s own kin. Although in the past children were married at younger ages to adults, generally young girls to older men, most societies have casted aside these traditions and instead deem it as taboo and illegal. Children who are exposed to sexual activities are more likely to have long term negative effects psychologically rather than physically. The clear cut definition of child sexual abuse is an adult using a child for their own sexual gratification. Furthermore, a child can also experience sexual exploitation where the child does not necessarily have genital contact but are involved in child pornography or observes a sexual act being played out. There are many other terms that are used to describe child abuse such as; molestation, victimization, assault, and rape. Children who are raped are descried as having the perpetrator intrude an aperture of the child’s body by using any part of their body to do so. Though even with these definitions it is difficult to determine certain acts sexual abuse, for instance when it is not okay for a parent to bathe with their children. Lastly, there are two different types of sexual abuse that are termed using the perpetrator. Interfamilial abuse, another word for incest, is a child being abused by a person that is related by blood or …show more content…
It is also the most difficult to define because it is often at times connected to the other forms of abuse. For instance, a child’s injuries may eventually heal but the psychological trauma from the events may not. A lot of children are haunted by their abuse for years and some never fully recover. Psychological maltreatment is split into two categories: emotional/psychological neglect and emotional/psychological abuse. Emotional and psychological neglect includes insufficient nurturance, refusing to provide sufficient care for the child, allowing for maladaptive behavior such as delinquency or drug abuse, and insufficient affection ( ). While emotional and psychological abuse consists of emotional and/or verbal assaults, threatening the child, or close confinement. Ultimately, psychological abuse is a pattern of mentally destructive behavior not an isolated