Possible Link Between Childhood Spanking and Mental Illness?

Cartoon of Dennis the Menace Being Spanked
According to the medical journal Pediatrics, there appears to be a link between childhood spanking and adult mental illness … or at least that’s the headline making the rounds.  (And, in case you can’t tell from my tone here, I’m calling shenanigans on this one)

From Yahoo:

Researchers examined data from more than 34,000 adults and found that being spanked significantly increased the risk of developing mental health issues as adults. According to their results, corporal punishment is associated with mood disorders, including depression and anxiety, as well as personality disorders and alcohol and drug abuse. They estimate that as much as 7 percent of adult mental illness may be attributable to childhood physical punishment, including slapping, shoving, grabbing, and hitting.

I guess my concern is, what exactly is the definition of “spanking” we’re working with here?

I know very few adults, both in my age group and on either end of it, that were not spanked as children at one point or another.  I personally was spanked pretty consistently (which should probably have demonstrated to my parents how ineffective beating on your kid’s butt is as punishment, but that’s a different story), and I don’t think being spanked as a child had any impact on the adult I am whatsoever.

When you get into the stuff that goes beyond spanking, though, the punching and the kicking and the throwing down stairs and smashing little kids into walls, I’m sure the correlation exists.  It’s just the way the reporting out of the study is spun in terms of its title that pisses me off, I guess.

And the fact that it’s pretty much an outrageous attempt to control parenting.

Before I go any further, I feel like I need to state that I have never spanked either of my children.  This has nothing to do with any sort of noble mindset or belief that it’ll screw them up or anything, but more because I have found that either logical consequences (you hit a kid with a baseball bat, so we’re canceling your birthday party) or revoking privileges are far more effective.  I mean, if she thinks her iPhone is at stake, my older daughter will do pretty much anything I ask.

The thing is, though, establishing the idea of logical consequences and revoking privileges is something that needs to be started at …

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Sophie’s Choice, Africa Edition?

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If you haven’t heard of Sophie’s Choice (both William Styron’s book and Alan Pakula’s film adaptation featuring Meryl Streep are top notch), you should definitely check them out.  The story involves a woman who, upon arriving at Auschwitz with her son and daughter, must choose which child will be immediately “eliminated” and which will be allowed to live … well, as much as life in a concentration camp can be considered “living”.

Unquestionably a work of fiction, right?

Except that something very similar is going on in Africa right now … yup, in 2011.

The tales pouring out of east African nations, notably Somalia, of terrible choices faced by mothers are heartwrenching.

From Yahoo News:

Wardo Mohamud Yusuf walked for two weeks with her 1-year-old daughter on her back and her 4-year-old son at her side to flee Somalia’s drought and famine. When the boy collapsed near the …

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Compulsory Sterilization for People with Disabilities?

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A British court case is raising questions (and eyebrows) about the largely outlawed performance of compulsory sterilizations.  Most of the western world has discontinued the practice, especially as the ethics of eugenics came under fire in the latter part of the 20th Century.  A woman known only as Mrs. P has requested the sterilization of her 21-year old daughter PP suffers from extreme learning disabilities and is currently pregnant with her second child.  Mrs. P plays caretaker to her daughter and grandchild, and claims that if her daughter had more children, she would have to place them in the care of the state. Instead, she …

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CUNY Student Forced into a Two Week Stay at a Mental Health Facility After Asking for Help with a Security Issue

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While the time we spend in college can be the best time of our lives, it can also be the most stressful. There’s so much going on – classes, homework, jobs, extracurriculars, planning your life, spending time with friends and significant others – that it’s easy to get overwhelmed.

Which is why it is quite confusing that most colleges and universities do not have strong counseling programs, or even mental health resources. Students are often misdiagnosed or offered unnecessary medications by their college’s counseling or health centers, or made to feel that they have a serious issue when they have just come to talk to someone.  On the other end of the spectrum are students who have their …

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