WHEREAS, This figure may not reflect the full scope of the
problem: childhood emotional abuse can be difficult to detect,
define and measure, especially across generations; and
WHEREAS, Research published in 2001 estimated that
psychological maltreatment may have been significantly present
in the childhood histories of more than one-third of the general
adult population of the United States; and
WHEREAS, As a public health issue, childhood emotional abuse
bears personal and societal costs; and
WHEREAS, Victim-serving organizations consider the lasting
effects of emotional abuse, especially childhood emotional
abuse, to be the "most damaging form of maltreatment"; and
WHEREAS, Survivors may experience lifelong patterns of
depression, estrangement, anxiety, low self-esteem,
inappropriate or troubled relationships or lack of empathy, and
the societal costs are great; and
WHEREAS, Prevent Child Abuse America estimated the economic
impact of child abuse and neglect at $104 billion in 2007, with
$33 billion in direct costs for foster care services,
hospitalization, mental health treatment and law enforcement and
more than $70 billion in indirect costs for loss of individual
productivity, chronic health problems, special education and
delinquent and criminal justice services; and
WHEREAS, It is important to enact legislation that raises
awareness of childhood emotional abuse, makes detection easier,
facilitates home visiting and parent mutual support self-help
groups and provides proactive mental health services for victims
and abusers; and
WHEREAS, This type of legislation would break parents and
guardians, children and society from the intergenerational cycle
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