Violence against women impairs kids growth
September 12th, 2008 - 5:49 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Sept 12 (ANI): Kids whose mothers are exposed to violence grow less, according to a new study.
The study found that violence against women in a family has serious consequences for the children’’s growth, health, and survival.
Kajsa Asling Monemi from Uppsala University studied women and their children in Bangladesh and Nicaragua and showed that children whose mothers are exposed to violence grow less and are sick more often than other children.
Kajsa Asling Monemi, paediatrician, the Department of Women’’s and Children’’s Health, monitored more than 3,000 children in Bangladesh from the women’’s pregnancy tests till when the children were two years old.
The study shows that children to women exposed to some form of violence had lower birth weights and grew less as infants and toddlers. They also got sick more often than other children with diseases like diarrhea and pneumonia.
“Both in Bangladesh and Nicaragua deaths before the age of five were more common among children whose mothers had been exposed to violence than among children of women who had never been subjected to violence,” she said.
According to the researcher, there are several possible explanations for why violence against a mother can affect her children’’s health. During pregnancy the fetus grows less, and after birth the mother’’s mental health is crucial both for her emotional contact with the children and for her ability to care for the children.
What’’s more, women who have been subjected to violence often have weaker social networks and often lack economic resources to seek medical care for their children, for example. (ANI)
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Tags: bangladesh, birth weights, consequences, deaths, diarrhea, diseases, economic resources, explanations, fetus, infants and toddlers, medical care, mental health, nicaragua, pneumonia, pregnancy tests, researcher, social networks, survival, uppsala university, violence against women