Children whose parents spank them or use other aggressive
methods to punish them are more likely to have sexual problems as teenagers or
adults, according to a research made by a University of Hampshire
domestic abuse expert.
Professor Murray Straus concludes that children who are
spanked have a much higher risk in adulthood to verbally or physically coerce a
partner into having sex, to have unprotected sex and to have masochistic sex.
Other studies have also been made, showing the link between
spanking and physical violence, but Professor Straus’ study is the first to
link spanking with sexual behaviour.
"My underlying motive was to bring this to the
attention of parents and of more people, in the hope it will help continue the
decrease in the use of corporal punishment," Straus said, according to The
Associated Press.
Straus first conducted a study of this kind in the 90’s,
when he asked 207 students at three colleges if they had ever been spanked as
children, and whether they were ever aroused by masochistic sex. He concluded
that the students who had been spanked in childhood were almost twice as likely
to practice masochistic sex.
Straus declared he would like pediatricians to warn against
spanking. He thinks parents should be made aware about the obvious harm that
physical violence does to children later in life.
“Parents should never, ever spank because, although it does
work, it’s no better than non-hitting methods that don’t have harmful side
effects. If there was an FDA for spanking, they’d say use an alternative that
doesn’t have harmful side effects,”he said.
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