Physical Domestic Violence during childhood Physical Domestic Violence (PDV) is an act of causing physical pain or injury. Types of physical abusive behavior include hitting, spitting, slapping, shoving, and grabbing. Physical Domestic Violence is also relevant for parents who have had a bad upbringing, mental issues, and substance abuse. Not only are most abusers’ men, but some of the abusers are women as well. These are facts that I’ve obtained through a show called Maid on Netflix. This show is about a mother and her daughter that are physically abused by the father. The mother and daughter go through many obstacles because of the abuse they have endured. During the show, it shows the ways that parents abuse their kids, and how it affects …show more content…
I also think there should be more help and awareness such as help centers and needed therapy for individuals that went through a physically abusive childhood. I think if there was more awareness spread about childhood physical domestic violence, people could create more ways to prevent it. By preventing Physical Domestic violence, I think statistically, substance abuse and mental health would go down dramatically. Unemployment and Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) are huge factors within adults that have experiences abusive traumas during childhood. Through the awareness of Physical abuse during childhood adults who are a victim that experience unemployment will be able to get help and be able to maintain a job to provide for themselves and even their families. Victims with Social Anxiety Disorder will be able to get therapy for their disorder and be able to live a healthy, normal, and a fearful life without the difficulty of social …show more content…
Some survivors abuse drugs for self-medication. “Childhood abuse is linked to substance use problems including, both alcohol and drug use” (National Library of Medicine, 2016). Many adults abuse substances as a strategy to manage negative results of the exposure to trauma. Not only do adults have the side effects of abusing drugs, but many adults that do abuse drugs undergo substance use disorder (SUD). “Substance Use Disorder is a treatable mental disorder that affects a person’s brain and behavior, leading to their inability to control their use of substances like legal or illegal drugs, alcohol, or meds. Symptoms can be moderate to severe, with addiction being the most severe” (Stephen H. O’Neil, 2009). Many of the substances abused include alcohol, weed, prescription medication, cocaine, opiates, hallucinogens, and inhalants. There are many complications being a Substance Use Disorder victim such as family issues, anger management, anxiety, fear, shame and guilt, and embarrassment. Because substances are addictive, it is hard for abusers to come back to sobriety. There are many supports groups and sobriety therapy including cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT), Contingency Management (CM), and Brief strategic family therapy (BSFT), and Alcohols Anonymous (AA). There are also affective medications that can treat Substance Use Disorder including buprenorphine,