One of the most complicated problems currently faced by medical professionals and government agencies is the question of domestic violence. Domestic violence includes all kinds of violence imposed on families by their families. Therefore, domestic violence can be expressed as spousal abuse, child abuse, brother abuse, or elderly abuse. Most authorities believe domestic violence often appears as violence against women and children. Such violence may involve treatment of physical injuries by health care workers, psychological effects on the victim, or aggressive behaviors of abusers.
Injuries and violence and violence (including domestic violence against women and children) are major public health problems that are neglected, killing over 5 million people each year. Currently, injuries account for 14% of the burden of worldwide diseases. Many injuries also cause lifelong disability, affecting up to 10% of the population. In particular, road traffic injuries are an important cause of unintended injuries in developed and developing countries. In all countries, mortality and morbidity are greatly reduced due to the use of seat belts, improved alcohol management, and general traffic safety. Of the children aged 15 to 44 in developing countries, three of the top 10 causes of death are related to injuries. It is a traffic accident, interpersonal violence, and suicide. Every year, 3 million young people from 10 to 25 years old, mainly traffic accidents, suicide, killings are killed.
Social factors such as political instability, violent armed conflict, discrimination, inequality, inequality (internal and intergenerational) do not contribute to health and sustainable development. Therefore, health and sustainable development also have moral or moral levels.
Children and domestic violence police may encounter up to 500,000 children during the annual domestic violence arrest in the United States. Among the same family, between 30% and 60% overlap between violence against children and violence against women (Youth Bureau Justice and Crime Prevention, November 2000). Most people in Lucas County Juvenile Court believe that domestic violence is a crime committed by an adult to other adults who are married or in intimate relationship. Most literature and research treat domestic violence as an adult crime. Young people are considered only victims. There are abundant studies in the literature indicating that there is a correlation between exposure to domestic violence and the possibility of future delinquency and violent behavior, but the effective response to breaking the cycle of violence is limited It is done. Teenagers rarely become perpetrators of domestic violence