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Mental and Emotional Consequences Children who experience abuse are more likely to develop anxiety, depression, and memory issues. Children may block out traumatic memories. Sometimes, this can lead to memory issues and other problems that affect areas of life beyond the abuse.
Children may have new problem behaviors as a result of what they have experienced. Anger, fear, and feeling overwhelmed can all cause a child to resist normal routines, react aggressively, or become more clingy or insecure.
But just living with chronic community violence can be enough to rob children of their sense of safety, putting them into survival mode, making them ready to gear up for fight or flight. Exposure to community violence can affect childrens outlook on the future and their sense of control.
Symptoms of Trauma and Psychopathology Descriptions of infants exposed to IPV include eating problems, sleep disturbances, and mood disturbances (Layzer et al., 1986). Clinical studies find poor sleeping habits, poorer general health, higher irritability, and increased screaming and crying (Alessi and Hearn, 2007).
Physical abuse, particularly head trauma, can have long-lasting effects on a childs development. Children who are abused physically can develop child traumatic stress. They are also at risk for depression and anxiety.
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Individual History of violent victimization. Attention deficits, hyperactivity, or learning disorders. History of early aggressive behavior. Involvement with drugs, alcohol, or tobacco. Low IQ. Poor behavioral control. Deficits in social cognitive or information-processing abilities. High emotional distress.
Exposure to IPV during infancy disrupts the infants emotional and cognitive development, the development of the Hypothalamus-Pituitary-Adrenal (HPA) axis and brain structures related to witnessing itself (auditory and visual cortex).
[1] Exposure to violence can harm a childs emotional, psychological and even physical development. Children exposed to violence are more likely to have difficulty in school, abuse drugs or alcohol, act aggressively, suffer from depression or other mental health problems and engage in criminal behavior as adults.
Young people may be depressed, suicidal, or develop PTSD . To deal with these feelings, they may try to hurt themselves, abuse substances such as drugs or alcohol, develop eating disorders or engage in risky sexual behavior.

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