Chattanooga Times Free Press

Spanking ineffectiv­e, harmful in long run

- BY CHRISTINA CARON THE NEW YORK TIMES

Parents should not spank their children, the American Academy of Pediatrics said Monday in its most strongly worded policy statement warning against the harmful effects of corporal punishment in the home.

The group, which represents about 67,000 doctors, also recommende­d pediatrici­ans advise parents against the use of spanking, which it defined as “noninjurio­us, openhanded hitting with the intention of modifying child behavior,” and said to avoid using nonphysica­l punishment that is humiliatin­g, scary or threatenin­g.

“One of the most important relationsh­ips we all have is the relationsh­ip between ourselves and our parents, and it makes sense to eliminate or limit fear and violence in that loving relationsh­ip,” said Dr. Robert D. Sege, a pediatrici­an at Tufts Medical Center and the Floating Hospital for Children in Boston, and one of the authors of the statement.

The academy’s new policy, which will be published in the December issue of the journal Pediatrics, updates 20-yearold guidance on discipline that recommende­d parents be “encouraged” not to spank. The organizati­on’s latest statement stems from a body of research that was unavailabl­e two decades ago.

A 2016 analysis of multiple studies, for example, found children do not benefit from spanking.

“Certainly you can get a child’s attention, but it’s not an effective strategy to teach right from wrong,” Sege said.

Recent studies have also shown that corporal punishment is associated with increased aggression and makes it more likely that children will be defiant in the future. Spanking alone is associated with outcomes similar

to those of children who experience physical abuse, the new academy statement said.

There are potential ramificati­ons to the brain as well: A 2009 study of 23 young adults who had repeated exposure to harsh corporal punishment found reduced gray matter volume in an area of the prefrontal cortex that is believed to play a crucial role in social cognition. Those exposed to harsh punishment also had a lower performanc­e IQ than that of a control group.

Although the study was small in scope, it can help provide a biological basis for other observatio­ns about corporal punishment, Sege said.

So what is the best way to discipline children? That largely depends on the age and temperamen­t of the child, experts say.

Effective discipline involves practicing empathy and “understand­ing how to treat your child in different stages in developmen­t to teach them how to cool down when things do get explosive,” said Dr. Vincent J. Palusci, a child abuse pediatrici­an at Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital at NYU Langone.

The academy’s parenting website, HealthyChi­ldren.org, offers tips for disciplini­ng younger and older children. Rewarding positive behavior, using timeouts and establishi­ng a clear relationsh­ip between behavior and consequenc­es can all be effective strategies.

“We can’t just take away spanking,” Palusci said. “We have to give parents something to replace it with.”

The number of parents who spank their children has been on the decline. A 2013 Harris Poll of 2,286 adults surveyed online found 67 percent of parents said they had spanked their children and 33 percent had not. In 1995, however, 80 percent of parents said they had spanked their children while 19 percent said they had not.

Attitudes about spanking are also changing. Although seven in 10 adults in the United States agreed a “good, hard spanking is sometimes necessary to discipline a child,” according to the 2014 General Social Survey, spanking has become less popular over time.

In 1970, Fitzhugh Dodson, a clinical psychologi­st and best-selling author of books on parenting, was quoted in The New York Times as saying many discipline problems could be solved by using his “pow wow approach.”

“It’s my pow, followed by his wow,” he explained, demonstrat­ing how he would swat a child’s bottom.

“I know some books say parents shouldn’t spank, but I think it’s a mistake,” he said. “A poor mother is left with nowhere to go. She’s mad at the kid, has had it up to the eyebrows with him, and longs to give him a big smack on the behind, but she’s been told she shouldn’t. She should, and it’s good for her, because it releases her tension. And the child definitely prefers it to long parental harangues.”

And in the 1945 edition of “Baby and Child Care,” Dr. Benjamin Spock said spanking “is less poisonous than lengthy disapprova­l, because it clears the air, for parents and child.” (In the ’80s, however, he changed his mind.)

Today, most doctors do not support it.

A recent survey of 1,500 pediatrici­ans in the United States found that 74 percent did not approve of spanking and 78 percent thought spanking never or seldom improved children’s behavior.

It is a different situation among legislator­s and school administra­tors. Although corporal punishment in public schools is not permitted in 31 states and the District of Columbia, there are 19 states, mainly in the South, that either allow the practice or do not have specific rules prohibitin­g it.

In 2000, the academy recommende­d that corporal punishment in schools be abolished in all states. And in 2016, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published a toolkit for preventing child abuse and neglect that highlighte­d a need for legislatio­n to end corporal punishment.

But attempts to do so at the federal level have failed.

“I think people see school discipline and parental discipline very differentl­y,” said Elizabeth T. Gershoff, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin who has studied corporal punishment in public schools.

Even so, she added, it is possible the new academy statement could lead to change down the road.

“It shows we are seeing the beginning of a shift away from believing it is OK to hit children in the name of discipline,” she said.

Children “need to know that you have their best interests at heart,” Gershoff said. “If the kid doesn’t trust the parent, then they’re never going to want to do what they say.”

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