Abstract

Little is known about risk and protective factors for emotional and physical child abuse in South Africa. Existing research has focused largely on sexual abuse and relied on recollections of childhood abuse from university and high‐school students or data from criminal reports. The objective of this study was to establish risk and protective factors for severe physical and emotional abuse amongst a large cross‐sectional community sample of South African youth. Confidential self‐report questionnaires were completed by children aged 13–19 (n = 603, 47.9% female) with local interviewers in deprived areas of South Africa. Standardised measures of abuse, hypothesised risk factors and socio‐demographic variables were used. Factors associated with severe physical and emotional child abuse were experience of family conflict (p = 0.003), unequal food distribution (p < 0.014), inconsistent discipline (p = 0.012), number of caregiver changes (p = 0.022), living with a step‐parent (p = 0.034), caregiver disability (p = 0.004), food insecurity (p = 0.006), bullying (p < 0.001), acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)‐related stigma (p < 0.001), sexual abuse (p = 0.003), school non‐attendance (p = 0.006) and non‐achievement (p = 0.015). These identified risk and protective factors at community, school, caregiver and household levels have the potential to affect the risk of abuse for children in South Africa, and may be valuable fields for future intervention efforts. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.‘The objective of this study was to establish risk and protective factors for severe physical and emotional abuse amongst a large cross‐sectional sample of South African youth’Key Practitioner MessagesRisk and protective factors for physical and emotional child abuse have not been thoroughly studied in South Africa.Risk and protective factors for child abuse in South Africa include poverty, AIDS‐related stigma, bullying, school non‐attendance and achievement, sexual abuse, caregiver disability, inconsistent discipline, family conflict and living with a step‐parent.Future research should focus on longitudinal data to establish causality and to examine the relationship between child abuse and caregiver AIDS sickness.

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