Child sexual abuse among adolescents in southeast Nigeria: A concealed public health behavioral issue | Manyike | Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences Old Website
 

Child sexual abuse among adolescents in southeast Nigeria: A concealed public health behavioral issue

Pius Manyike, Josephat Chinawa, Elias Aniwada, Udechukwu NP, Odutola Odetunde, Awoere Chinawa

Abstract


Background and Objective: Child sexual abuse among adolescents is an often overlooked issue in pediatrics, yet it is a major cause of low self esteem and stigmatization in adolescents. The objective of this study was to determine the socioeconomic determinant and pattern of child sexual abuse among adolescent attending secondary schools in South East Nigeria.

Methods: This was a cross-sectional study that was carried out among children in three secondary schools in Enugu and Ebonyi states of Nigeria. Five hundred and six adolescents who met inclusion criteria were consecutively recruited into our prospective study between June and October, 2014.

Results: One hundred and ninety nine (40 %) of the respondents had been abused and the commonest form of abuse was to look at pornographic pictures, drawings, films, videotapes or magazine 93(18.4%). Fifty eight (11.5%) adolescents stated that they were abused once with age at first exposure being 7-12 years 57 (11.4%). When grouped together, family members and relatives are perpetrators of child sexual abuse.There was significant difference in sex abuse between males and females (p=0.014) while there were no significant difference for age (p=0.157) and social class (p=0.233).

Conclusion: Overall prevalence and one time prevalence rates of sexual abuse among adolescents in south east Nigeria was 40% and 11.5% respectively with male perpetrators. There is no link between socioeconomic class, age and child sexual abuse among adolescents.

doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.12669/pjms.314.7115

Manyike PC, Chinawa JM, Elias A, Udechukwu NP, Odutola OI, Awoere CT. Child sexual abuse among adolescents in southeast Nigeria: A concealed public health behavioral issue. Pak J Med Sci 2015;31(4):827-832.   doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.12669/pjms.314.7115

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.


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