One out of five California adults with children living in their homes were beaten, kicked or physically abused when they were children, and one in ten were sexually abused, according to released recently by a children鈥檚 health foundation.
Experts believe that鈥檚 an undercount.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 probably a low estimate,鈥 said Cassandra Joubert, director of the Central California Children’s Institute at California State University, Fresno. 鈥淚 think these kinds of events within families are hush-hush, swept under the rug, not really talked about.鈥
Focusing on the abuse that parents have experienced is essential to interrupting the cycle of trauma, Joubert said. Adults who were abused or neglected as children often end up emulating their own parents.
鈥淚t鈥檚 almost this mirroring effect,鈥 Joubert said.
The data were recently released by kidsdata.org, a program of the Palo Alto-based Lucile Packard Foundation for Children鈥檚 Health, to coincide with a recent in San Francisco.
Other notable findings: 36 percent of adults with children living in their homes experienced verbal abuse as children; 19 percent witnessed domestic violence. In some counties, including San Bernardino, Contra Costa and Riverside, a fifth of adults who have children in their homes reported experiencing at least four different adverse childhood experiences growing up. Those experiences can include聽physical, sexual and verbal abuse, having parents divorce, and living with someone who suffers from mental illness or abuses drugs or alcohol.
The findings come from data collected in a survey by the Public Health Institute. Marta聽Induni, research program director at the institute鈥檚 Survey Research Group, oversaw the survey of nearly 28,000 California residents. She said she has been particularly touched by the many people who have thanked her for asking them about painful and often stigmatized childhood experiences.
鈥淚 think that speaks to the importance of just putting this into the common vernacular: 鈥楲et鈥檚 talk about this,鈥欌 she said.
A bill to expand school-based mental health services for young children came to a halt in the state Senate Appropriations Committee this summer, because it did not include a way to fund the additional services. A spokesman for Assemblymember Rob Bonta (D-Oakland) said Bonta may propose that the state budget include additional funding for expanded services.
Wendy Davis, a 40-year-old resident of Clovis who works with Joubert as a training coordinator at the Children鈥檚 Institute, knows firsthand the effect childhood trauma can have on parenting.
At the age of five, Davis came to the United States from El Salvador with three of her siblings and her single mother. The family was 鈥渧ery, very poor,鈥 Davis said. Her mother was almost always working, and was constantly stressed and frustrated, she said.
鈥淪he was barely around,鈥 Davis said. 鈥淭he little that she was, wasn鈥檛 pleasant.鈥
Davis said she was abused emotionally and physically growing up, and she witnessed domestic violence against others in her home. She was sexually molested by people who floated in and out of the house, Davis said.
At 18, Davis gave birth to her first son, Alex. She now has four sons, ranging in age from 6 to 21. After her youngest, Tye, was born, Davis spent a month in the hospital with serious health problems. Once she returned home, she experienced severe postpartum depression and didn鈥檛 want to hold Tye, or be near him. She blamed him for the illness she鈥檇 suffered after he was born.
When Tye was four months old, Davis sought help. She starting taking medication and going to therapy. There, she was able to recognize how profoundly her troubled childhood had impacted her. She finally began to bond with Tye. Today, she said, she and her youngest are 鈥渋nseparable.鈥
鈥淚t has helped tremendously,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 wish I would have done it a lot of sooner.鈥
Mark Cloutier, executive director of the Center for Youth Wellness, said the data reinforce how crucial it is for pediatricians to screen children 鈥斅燼nd even their caregivers 鈥 for exposure to past traumatic experiences. Such experiences often lead not only to mental health disorders, but also to acute chronic physical diseases, he said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 important for parents to understand and address their own experiences in childhood as a way of blocking the further transmission to their children,鈥 Cloutier said.
Kendra Rogers, managing director for early childhood policy at the advocacy group Children Now, called the data 鈥渟ad and frustrating.鈥
鈥淲e fail these kids until they turn 18 and then we just blame them and criticize them,鈥 she said.
She pointed to a number of policy prescriptions, ranging from funding more parenting programs to shoring up mental health services.
鈥淲e have serious trauma and violence in our history,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he more we address it, the better we can be.鈥
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