Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Focus On Traumatized Boys Critical To Gender Equality, New Research Shows

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 May, 2019 07:35 PM
  • Focus On Traumatized Boys Critical To Gender Equality, New Research Shows

TORONTO — Boys in poor urban areas around the world are suffering even more than girls from violence, abuse and neglect, groundbreaking international research published on Monday suggests.

 

The study in the Journal of Adolescent Health, along with similar new research, suggests an adequate focus on helping boys is critical to achieving gender equality in the longer term.


"This is the first global study to investigate how a cluster of traumatic childhood experiences known as ACEs, or adverse childhood experiences, work together to cause specific health issues in early adolescence, with terrible life-long consequences," Dr. Robert Blum, the lead researcher for the global early adolescent study, said in a statement.


"While we found young girls often suffer significantly, contrary to common belief, boys reported even greater exposure to violence and neglect, which makes them more likely to be violent in return."


The study from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health looked at childhood traumas suffered by 1,284 adolescents aged 10 to 14 in more than a dozen low-income urban settings around the world such as the United States, China, the U.K., Egypt and Bolivia.


Overall, 46 per cent of young adolescents reported experiencing violence, 38 per cent said they suffered emotional neglect and 29 per cent experienced physical neglect. Boys, however, were more likely to report being victims of physical neglect, sexual abuse and violence.


While higher levels of trauma lead both boys and girls to engage in more violent behaviours, boys are more likely to become violent. Girls tend to show higher levels of depression.


Separately, a new report to be released next month at an international conference in Vancouver concludes that focusing on boys is critical to achieving gender parity. The report from the Bellagio Working Group on Gender Equality — a global coalition of adolescent health experts — finds boys and men are frequently overlooked in the equality equation.


"We cannot achieve a gender-equitable world by ignoring half of its occupants," the report states. "It is crucial that boys and men be included in efforts to promote gender equality and empowerment."


For the past six years, a consortium of 15 countries led by the Bloomberg School of Public Health and World Health Organization has been working on the global early adolescent study. The aim is to understand how gender norms are formed in early adolescence and how they predispose young people to sexual and other health risks.


Evidence gathered by the study indicates boys experience as much disadvantage as girls but are more likely to smoke, drink and suffer injury and death in the second decade of life than their female counterparts.


The key to achieving gender equality over the next decade or so — as the United Nations aims to do — involves addressing conditions and stereotypes that are harmful to both girls and boys, the researchers say. They also say it's crucial to intervene as early as age 10. The norm is now age 15.


"Gender norms, attitudes and beliefs appear to solidify by age 15 or 16," the working group says. "We must actively engage girls and boys at the onset of adolescence to increase total social inclusion and produce generational change."


Leena Augimeri, a child mental-health expert with the Child Development Institute in Toronto, agreed with the need to focus on boys as well as girls. At the same time, she said, the genders do require different approaches.


"Boys are equally at risk," said Augimeri, who was not involved in the studies. "When we look at the various issues that impact our children, we have to look at it from different perspectives and lenses and you can't think there's a one fit for all."

MORE National ARTICLES

Dog From Iran That Had Acid Thrown In Face Has Successful Surgery In Vancouver

A seven-month-old puppy from Iran that had acid thrown on her face underwent a surgery in Vancouver on Tuesday morning.

Dog From Iran That Had Acid Thrown In Face Has Successful Surgery In Vancouver

B.C. Government Promises To Tackle Cellphone Costs, Poverty And Money Laundering

B.C. Government Promises To Tackle Cellphone Costs, Poverty And Money Laundering
The province's minority NDP government said Tuesday that making life more affordable will be the hallmark of its initiatives and legislation in the coming months.

B.C. Government Promises To Tackle Cellphone Costs, Poverty And Money Laundering

B.C. Deputy Speaker Linda Reid Steps Aside Amid Probe Into Legislature Staff

The B.C. Liberals say Linda Reid is giving up her position as assistant deputy Speaker and will be replaced by caucus member Joan Isaacs.

B.C. Deputy Speaker Linda Reid Steps Aside Amid Probe Into Legislature Staff

Coquitlam, B.C., Fire Department Puts Out Trailer Fire, Finds One Dead

Coquitlam, B.C., Fire Department Puts Out Trailer Fire, Finds One Dead
The RCMP and fire department in Coquitlam, B.C., are investigating a fatal fire in a trailer.

Coquitlam, B.C., Fire Department Puts Out Trailer Fire, Finds One Dead

Man Charged With Attempted Murder In Transit Officer Shooting In Metro Vancouver

Mounties say charges have been laid in the shooting of a Metro Vancouver Transit Police officer on a SkyTrain platform last month.  

Man Charged With Attempted Murder In Transit Officer Shooting In Metro Vancouver

South Coast B.C. Snow Storm Passes On, But Many Areas Still Digging Out

South Coast B.C. Snow Storm Passes On, But Many Areas Still Digging Out
Environment Canada has lifted snowfall warnings for British Columbia's south coast, but conditions are still treacherous in some areas and frigid temperatures persist in parts of the province.

South Coast B.C. Snow Storm Passes On, But Many Areas Still Digging Out