Torbay Safeguarding Children Partnership

Child abuse can take a range of different forms which are usually defined as physical abuse, emotional abuse, sexual abuse or neglect.

Child abuse can occur in your home, or in the organisations, schools or groups that you go to. There are four major categories of child abuse:

If you are worried about a child or need advice about any form of child abuse, contact the NSPCC helpline.

Physical abuse

Physical abuse is defined as when someone deliberately hurts a child, such as hitting, shaking, throwing, poisoning, burning, drowning or suffocating a child deliberately and with the intention of causing harm.

If a child is hurt by a relative, friend or stranger and it causes them physical harm, such as cuts, bruises, broken bones or other injuries, it is physical abuse.

Emotional abuse

Emotional abuse can take different forms such as when a child is unfairly blamed for everything, or told they are stupid, worthless or ugly and made to feel very sad and unhappy. Emotional abuse is severe and persistent ill treatment of a child. It can have long-lasting and devastating effects on a child's emotional health and development.

Emotional abuse may be the only form of abuse suffered by a child, or it might be an element of other child abuse and neglect.

Sexual abuse

Child sexual abuse involves persuading or forcing a child to take part in sexual activities, or encouraging a child to behave in sexually inappropriate ways.

The sexual abuse of children is more than just physical sexual contact and includes sexual touching clothed or unclothed,  all penetrative sex, intentionally engaging in sexual activity in front of a child and making, permitting to take, distributing and showing or advertising indecent images of children.

Please also refer to CSE.

Neglect

Neglect is where a child is not being looked after properly. This can include not getting enough to eat or being left alone in dangerous situations. Neglect is the persistent failure to meet a child's basic and essential needs.

Children need adequate food, water, shelter, warmth, protection and health care and they need their carers to be attentive, dependable and kind. If a child does not have a safe and stable home, this is neglect.

 


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