Bulletin of the World Health Organization (May 2009)

Severe physical punishment: risk of mental health problems for poor urban children in Brazil

  • Isabel A Bordin,
  • Cristiane S Duarte,
  • Clovis A Peres,
  • Rosimeire Nascimento,
  • Bartira M Curto,
  • Cristiane S Paula

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 87, no. 5
pp. 336 – 344

Abstract

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OBJECTIVE: To examine the relationship between specific types of child mental health problems and severe physical punishment, in combination with other important known risk factors. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional study in Embu, São Paulo, Brazil, as the Brazilian component of a multicountry survey on abuse in the family environment. From a probabilistic sample of clusters that included all eligible households (women aged 15-49 years with a son or daughter 7). Backward logistic regression analysis identified independent correlates and significant interactions. FINDINGS: Multivariate modelling showed that severe punishment was an independent correlate of comorbid internalizing and externalizing problems but was not associated with internalizing problems only. It increased the risk of externalizing problems alone only for children and adolescents not exposed to maternal anxiety or depression. Maternal anxiety or depression increased the risk only for children or adolescents not exposed to severe punishment. CONCLUSION: Severe punishment may be related to child mental health problems, with the mechanism depending on the type of problem. Its influence persists in the presence of family stressors such as the father's absence and maternal anxiety or depression.