After several studies, researchers confirmed that when children are exposed to intimate partner violence (IPV), it significantly affects their emotional development (Hughes & Chau, 2013; Herman- Smith, 2013). This will raise doubts; if you want to measure IPV, you should take away the child from the family. We can conclude that they can not report their abuse if we believe that most children who witnessed IPV are under 6 years of age and do not fully understand what is going on (Hughes & Chau, 2013).
Abuse studies involve children being exposed to violence of intimate partners. During the investigation, 26% of children recorded evidence of emotional harm. However, Black, Trocmé, Fallon, and MacLaurin (2008), in the 2003 CIS data survey, how child welfare agencies respond to partner violence, whether it occurs alone or in other forms Depending on whether or not it occurs. In the survey targeting only children's domestic violence, participation rate in child welfare after survey was the lowest, it was chosen to end at 64% of survey. The author says:
Children exposed to intimate partner violence, especially chronic violence often show symptoms associated with posttraumatic stress disorder
Therefore psychological intervention for children and adolescents who are victims of child abuse and / or exposure to violence of intimate partners represents a strategy to prevent violence of intimate partners backed by new evidence It seems to be. Their impact on sexual violence is currently unknown. School-based social and emotional skills develop impulsivity, lack of sympathy, and poor social skills. This may indicate a precursor to behavioral disorder, antisocial personality disorder. Form of violence including intimate partners and sexual violence. Therefore, cognitive and behavioral skills training programs and social development programs to deal with these factors in children and adolescents are promising strategies to prevent subsequent violence.
Interventions in children and adolescents who are subject to abuse and / or intimate partner violence, as described in section 2.3, may be a child or adolescent who has suffered child abuse or parental violence is a perpetrator and sacrifice Violence to become a person, intervention in this field is particularly important. A meta-analysis (Skowron & Reinemann, 2005) investigated 21 projects, including child abuse and psychological interventions for adolescents. The results showed that psychotherapy for child abuse improves among participants: Approximately 71% of treated children seemed to work better than untreated children. All interventions are designed to improve cognitive, emotional and behavioral outcomes, 11 of which are considered experimental