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- $Unique_ID{BRK01346}
- $Pretitle{}
- $Title{Problems of Battered Women Being Overplayed for Ratings Sake?}
- $Subject{battered wives statistics community social women abuse physical
- mentally emotionally home injuries injured psychiatric problem children child
- abused batter battering wife behavior behaviors female abuses physically homes
- family families}
- $Volume{Q-23}
- $Log{}
-
- Copyright (c) 1991-92,1993 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
-
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- Problems of Battered Women Being Overplayed for Ratings Sake?
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-
- QUESTION: Although both the newspapers and television programs keep
- presenting the problems of battered women, it must certainly be far less
- common then they make out. I think it is getting out of hand and is being
- overplayed just for ratings' sake. Would you care to comment, or do you just
- go along with all this unnecessary hype?
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- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ANSWER: Sadly, you're mistaken. You may think the problem is one of
- media hype, but much medical research substantiates it, and, if anything, the
- problem is vastly underplayed (not only by the battered woman but also by
- those who come in contact with her). Here are the results of just one study.
- In a hospital of a mid-sized city, 37 battered women were seen in the
- Emergency Room for treatment in only one month's time. Multiply that number
- for a yearly figure and that means in but a single hospital of all those in
- the entire country, 450 battered women can be found. Those figures are
- staggering if you consider their implications. Not only that, but of the 37
- battered women who showed up at the hospital under study, it was found that 20
- of them had been to the hospital before for other battered injuries. Yet, in
- only three of the charts was there any suspicion noted of abuse. This
- medical record keeping is eye-opening because it shows that even people who
- are trained to deal with the public in emergencies are not yet aware of the
- extent of abuse. And if they do suspect it, they may be reluctant to ask the
- probing questions that may reveal the problem. This attitude merely keeps the
- battered woman quiet about her situation. Already subject to physical abuse,
- she has also been mentally and emotionally battered, and feels that she is to
- blame for the problem. The way she sees it, why should she tell someone else
- if it will only subject her to more criticism and humiliation? Even when she
- does get temporary freedom from her abuser, she is in much more danger from
- the now enraged spouse if she has to return to the home. Almost every
- practicing physician has seen women with injuries that just don't match the
- explanation offered for them. Another reason a lay person like yourself may
- not see the problem is because many abused women hide inside the house for a
- few days after each incident or they are injured in bodily areas that are
- protected by clothing. Wife abuse results in psychiatric problems, suicide
- attempts, aborted pregnancies, and behavioral problems in children (child
- abuse usually coexists in the home). If you increase your suspicions, you
- will undoubtedly come across an abused woman. Battered wives need referrals
- to legal, social services and health care agencies, and most important,
- understanding from us all, if they are to beat the problem.
-
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-
- The material contained here is "FOR INFORMATION ONLY" and should not replace
- the counsel and advice of your personal physician. Promptly consulting your
- doctor is the best path to a quick and successful resolution of any medical
- problem.
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