Yes
Kids that are abused will have a terrible childhood, and most likely abuse their own children later on in life if so.
Children get physical scars and emotional scars when they are abused. The emotional scars usually stay with them for life and affect their personality and who they become as adults.
Most likely kids and young adults :)
some people abuse little kids and they also take people from a school and abuse them
well it is likely both ways, but kids possibly make more mistakes than adults because they dont know as much
Some parents abuse their kids because they have an alcohol or drugs problem, or they have an extreme temper and they take it out on their kids, some parents abuse their kids because the parents went through something traumatic like losing a wife or husband (but that's still not an excuse to start abusing your child!) Some parents abuse their children because they were abused when they were children, and then, you get some people who are just plain cruel and enjoy abusing children. Sometimes kids are abused because of temper tantrums or how they act all the time to their parents.
To be honest, it is most likely for adults to have an overactive bladder than for kids.
It is designed for kids and teenagers but that is my opinion. Adults can read the magazine too. But adults are most likely to read Star and People.
The majority of abusers are related to the victims. However, senior citizens and kids are often abused by non-relatives. Girlfriends or boyfriends can be abused by their loved one. Disabled people can be abused by anyone and be unable to defend themselves. Students can be abused or military servicemen can be abused by others. Sadly, the abuse of others is on the rise (well it is more like a case of reporting or discovering the problem is on the rise).
Research topic questions:When a child "helps" a parent who is mentally or physically ill, is that a type of child abuse? When could it become child abuse?What are the negative effects of "telling" on an abuser? Are there worse negative effects when a child "tells" but is disbelieved?Is a strong isolated family unit better or worse in terms of preventing OR identifying child abuse?How might a child feel they are "different" after they "tell" on an abuser and how can adults help reduce that feeling?If you assume that there is no "one way" to stop abuse from occurring, where and on what should adults focus and spend money to prevent child abuse?How do you dispel the idea that all abused kids will grow up to abuse? How did this belief start and what will change this belief?When a parent who was abused as a child finds themselves acting/sounding "just like my parents did with me!", would it help or make things more confusing to explain to children, generally, their parents' pasts? Does it "help" or hurt a child to know their parent was abused when young?
over 905,600 kids were abused in 2006
Probably for my best answer is that most of the times because the adults are drunk or something bad happened so there taking it all out on the kids.