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MYTH 1
Domestic violence does not affect many people.
FACT
- A woman is beaten every 15 seconds. (Bureau of Justice
Statistics, Report to the nation on Crime and Justice. The Data.
Washington DC Office of Justice Program, US Dept. of Justice.
Oct 1983)
- Domestic violence is the leading cause of injury to women
between ages 15 and 44 in the united States - more than car
accidents, muggings, and rapes combined. (Uniform Crime Reports,
Federal Bureau of Investigation, 1991)
- Battered women are more likely to suffer miscarriages and
to give birth to babies with low birth weights. (Surgeon
General, United States, 1992)
- Sixty-three percent of the young men between the ages of
11 and 20 who are serving time for homicide have killed their
mother's abuser. (March of Dimes, 1992)
MYTH 2
Battering is only a momentary loss of temper.
FACT
- Battering is the establishment of control and fear in a
relationship through violence and other forms of abuse. The
batterer uses acts of violence and a series of behaviors, including
intimidation, threats, psychological abuse, isolation, etc.
to coerce and to control the other person. The violence may
not happen often, but it remains as a hidden (and constant)
terrorizing factor. (Uniform Crime Reports, Federal Bureau
of Investigation, 1990)
- "One in five women victimized by their spouses or ex-spouses
report they had been victimized over and over again by the same
person." (The Basics of Batterer Treatment, Common Purpose,
Inc., Jamaica Plain, MA)
MYTH 3
Domestic violence only occurs in poor, urban areas.
FACT
- Women of all cultures, races, occupations, income levels,
and ages are battered - by husbands, boyfriends, lovers and
partners. (Surgeon General Antonia Novello, as quoted in
Domestic Violence: Battered Women, publication of the Reference
Department of the Cambridge Public Library, Cambridge, MA)
- "Approximately one-third of the men counseled (for
battering) at Emerge are professional men who are well respected
in their jobs and their communities. these have included doctors,
psychologists, lawyers, ministers, and business executives.
(For Shelter and Beyond, Massachusetts Coalition of Battered
Women Service Groups, Boston, MA 1990)
MYTH 4
Domestic violence is just a push, slap or punch - it does not
produce serious injuries.
FACT
- Battered women are often severely injured - 22 to 35 percent
of women who visit medical emergency rooms are there for injuries
related to ongoing partner abuse. (David Adams, "Identifying
the Assaultive Husband in Court: You be the Judge." Boston
Bar Journal, 33-4, July/August 1989)
- One in four pregnant women have a history of partner violence.
(Journal of the American Medical Association, 1992)
MYTH 5
It is easy for battered women to leave their abuser.
FACT
- Women who leave their batterers are at a 75% greater risk
of being killed by the batterer than those who stay. (Barbara
Hart, National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, 1988)
- Nationally, 50 percent of all homeless women and children
are on the streets because of violence in the home. (Senator
Joseph Biden, U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Violence
Against Women: Victims of the System, 1991)
- There are nearly three times as many animal shelters in
the United States as there are shelters for battered women and
their children. (Senate Judiciary Hearings, Violence Against
Women Act, 1990)
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