The Delaware Gazette

Survey: 1 in 4 US women victims of severe violence

MIKE STOBBE

AP Med­ical Writer

ATLANTA — It’s a star­tling num­ber: 1 in 4 women sur­veyed by the gov­ern­ment say they were vio­lently attacked by their hus­bands or boyfriends.

Experts in domes­tic vio­lence don’t find it too sur­pris­ing, although some aspects of the sur­vey may have led to higher num­bers than are some­times reported.

Even so, a gov­ern­ment offi­cial who over­saw the research called the results “astounding.”

“It’s the first time we’ve had this kind of esti­mate” on the preva­lence of inti­mate part­ner vio­lence, said Linda Degutis of the Cen­ters for Dis­ease Con­trol and Prevention.

The sur­vey, released by the CDC Wednes­day, marks the begin­ning of a new annual project to look at how many women say they’ve been abused.

One expert called the new report’s esti­mate on rape and attempted rape “extremely high” — with 1 in 5 women say­ing they were vic­tims. About half of those cases involved inti­mate part­ners. No doc­u­men­ta­tion was sought to ver­ify the women’s claims, which were made anonymously.

But advo­cates say the new rape num­bers are plausible.

“It’s a major prob­lem that often is under-estimated and over-looked,” said Linda James, direc­tor of health for Futures With­out Vio­lence, a San Francisco-based orga­ni­za­tion that advo­cates against domes­tic abuse.

The CDC report is based on a ran­dom­ized tele­phone sur­vey of about 9,000 women and 7,400 men.

Among the findings:

• As many as 29 mil­lion women say they have suf­fered severe and fright­en­ing phys­i­cal vio­lence from a boyfriend, spouse or other inti­mate part­ner. That includes being choked, beaten, stabbed, shot, punched, slammed against some­thing or hurt by hair-pulling.

  • That num­ber grows to 36 mil­lion if slap­ping, push­ing and shov­ing are counted.
  • Almost half of the women who reported rape or attempted rape said it hap­pened when they were 17 or younger.
  • As many as 1 in 3 women have expe­ri­enced rape, phys­i­cal vio­lence or stalk­ing by an inti­mate part­ner in their life­times, com­pared to about 1 in 10 men.
  • Both men and women who had been men­aced or attacked in these ways reported more health prob­lems. Female vic­tims, in par­tic­u­lar, had sig­nif­i­cantly higher rates of irri­ta­ble bowel syn­drome, asthma, fre­quent headaches and dif­fi­culty sleeping.
  • Cer­tain states seemed to have higher reports of sex­ual vio­lence than oth­ers. Alaska, Ore­gon and Nevada were among the high­est in rapes and attempted rapes of women, and Vir­ginia and Ten­nessee were among the lowest.

Sev­eral of the CDC num­bers are higher than those of other sources. For exam­ple, the CDC study sug­gests that 1.3 mil­lion women have suf­fered rape, attempted rape or had sex forced on them in the pre­vi­ous year. That sta­tis­tic is more than seven times greater than what was reported by a Depart­ment of Jus­tice house­hold sur­vey con­ducted last year.

The CDC rape num­bers seem “extremely high,” but there may be sev­eral rea­sons for the dif­fer­ences, includ­ing how the sur­veys were done, who chose to par­tic­i­pate and how “rape” and other types of assault were defined or inter­preted, said Shan­nan Cata­lano, a sta­tis­ti­cian with the Bureau of Jus­tice Statistics.

“It is an evolv­ing field, and every­one is striv­ing to get a han­dle on what’s the best esti­mate,” Cata­lano said.

The CDC’s num­bers don’t seem sur­pris­ing to peo­ple who work with abused women.

“I think that the aware­ness is grow­ing,” said Kim Frn­dak, com­mu­nity edu­ca­tor for the Women’s Res­cue Cen­ter to End Domes­tic Vio­lence, which oper­ates a shel­ter on the out­skirts of Atlanta.

“More and more peo­ple are really say­ing, ‘Oh, this is some­thing that we need to pay atten­tion to as well,’ because it’s your sis­ter, it’s your mother, it’s your daugh­ter, it’s your son, it’s your brother. Some­one in your own cir­cle is being affected by domes­tic vio­lence, and the effects can be dev­as­tat­ing,” she said.

AP News Posted by on Dec 14 2011. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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