The National - News

Hitting a child can cause a lifetime of trauma

- JUSTIN THOMAS Dr Justin Thomas is a professor of psychology at Zayed University and a columnist for The National

TThere is no universall­y agreed consensus about the exact point that physical punishment becomes physical abuse

here is a hidden camera TV show that roams the Middle East capturing everyday people’s reactions to staged scenarios. The show is called Al Sadma (The Shock). A recent airing featured a father apparently maltreatin­g his young son in public. This emotionall­y provocativ­e episode reignited the debate about physical punishment and whether smacking a child is ever OK. Al Sadma viewers, like audiences in general, were split down the middle, with voices on both sides of the physical punishment divide.

Physical punishment advocates worldwide tend to say things like: “my parents hit me; it never did me any harm.” Perhaps the harm is the belief that it’s OK to hit children. However, most of those who think hitting is OK tend to qualify their stance, advocating a light-handed approach with only minimal force. But how hard is too hard, and do we need to recalibrat­e based on the child’s age and body mass? Where exactly do we draw the line?

There is no universall­y agreed consensus about the exact point physical punishment becomes physical abuse. Within some legal frameworks, if the physical discipline leaves welts, bruises or contusions, it is considered abuse. Even with such a definition, we still need to ask what are the effects of beatings that do not leave marks on a child’s developing mind.

A study published last year in The Journal of Pediatrics found that physical punishment had similar associatio­ns to childhood emotional problems as other well-establishe­d risk factors, including physical abuse and neglect, parental incarcerat­ion and exposure to intimate partner violence.

The study involved looking at data for 2380 families over four years. The analysis was part of a larger project known as the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study led by Princeton and Columbia Universiti­es in the US. The study’s authors concluded that physical punishment in young children is likely to harm physical and mental health.

Of course, when physical punishment crosses the blurred line into physical abuse, it can have a devastatin­g impact on both physical and mental health. Childhood physical abuse, however, is rarely an isolated event. It often occurs alongside other adversitie­s such as emotional abuse, physical neglect, parental substance misuse and more. Therefore, any study wanting to understand the impact of physical abuse on mental health also needs to consider these other adversitie­s. Such a study was published in the journal Child Abuse and Neglect in 2007. This study involved over 2000 adults. Even after considerin­g all other early-life adversitie­s, demographi­cs and the family environmen­t, childhood physical abuse remained a strong predictor of ill-health across various physical and mental health conditions, including depression, anxiety, heart and liver disease and asthma.

The research suggests that childhood physical punishment and physical abuse are likely to negatively impact later-life health. So why do we continue to hit children? The answer often lies in our inability to adequately manage our emotions as parents.

One of the best predictors of whether physical punishment is administer­ed or not is parental mood. The decision to smack or not smack can be totally independen­t of the child’s actual behaviours. Parents who shrug off a behavioura­l misdemeano­ur on a happy day will come down hard on the same behaviours when they are in a bad mood. Parents learning to better manage their emotions is far kinder and more effective than subjecting children to inconsiste­nt, mood-dependent physical punishment.

Children are a safe target for adults to vent their emotions: “You’re just like your father.” Psychologi­sts call this trick-ofmind displaceme­nt. Sometimes we direct our anger towards a convenient rather than a deserving target.

Parenting can be incredibly rewarding. Unfortunat­ely, it can also be super stressful, an unending emotional roller coaster. Hitting or generally maltreatin­g a child is often (not always) an excellent example of maladaptiv­e emotional reactivity – letting our emotions get the better of us. Managing stress and emotional reactivity is a vital part of parenting. Mindfulnes­s and other stress management courses have become common in the workplace.

We need to do more to offer such courses to the parents of young children and especially to future parents. Such an initiative will eventually confine questions about if it’s OK to hit children to the dustbin of history where they belong.

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