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Spanking

By: The Kid's Doctor Staff
Updated: February 13, 2012

"Spare the rod; spoil the child" was a fairly common attitude that many parents took to heart. Spanking was the way you disciplined a misbehaving child - even if the child wasn't capable of understanding what they were doing wrong. Over the years, spanking has declined some in popularity. A just released twenty-year study reveals the long-term harmful effect that spanking or slapping has on a child's development.

The study found that children who were spanked as an everyday physical punishment were more aggressive against parents, siblings, peers and spouses.

The authors also noted that physical punishment is linked to various mental health problems, including anxiety, depression, and drug and alcohol abuse. What's more, recent neuroimaging studies have shown that physical punishment may alter parts of the brain that are linked to performance on IQ tests and increase vulnerability to drug or alcohol dependence, they write.

"I think it's important for parents to understand that although physical punishment might get a child to do something in the immediate situation, there are many side effects that can develop over the long term," said co-author Joan Durrant, a child clinical psychologist at Family Social Sciences at the University of Manitoba in Canada. 

"For example, the more often a child sees a parent respond to conflict or frustration with slapping or spanking, the more likely that child will do the same when confronting their own conflicts," Durrant said.

Research has shown that since the 1970s, spanking has declined in the United States, but many parents still believe it's an acceptable form of punishment. A recent University of North Carolina study revealed that nearly 80 percent of preschool children are spanked. Parents who believe in spanking say they are skeptical of published studies and question whether it might be the aggressive behavior that prompts the spanking - not the other way around.

"It is the case that children who are more aggressive do tend to get hit more, but the punishment does not reduce those children's aggression; rather, it exacerbates it," said Ron Ensom, who worked as a social worker at the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario, in Ottawa, when the paper was written.

"When parents of aggressive children are instructed in how to reduce their use of spanking, and they do indeed reduce it, the level of their children's aggression declines," Ensom said. "And when children who all have the same level of aggression when the study begins are followed over a period of years, those who are spanked tend to get more aggressive over time, while those who are not spanked tend to get less aggressive."

Some parents and caregivers automatically use spanking as a way to stop a certain behavior in their children. Mary Alvord, a child clinical psychologist in private practice in Rockville and Silver Spring, Md., says she thinks the authors did a good job in summarizing the research but wishes they had offered parents more workable alternative approaches to discipline. "I just wish they had taken the next step and given the doctors more tools to show parents what to do, rather than focusing so much on what they shouldn't do."

"Parents often feel helpless in these situations, and they want their child to get the message that what they did is wrong," Alvord said. "So I don't get preachy with parents, but I try to explain that there are so many more effective things that parents can do, like timeouts."

The study is published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

If you are struggling with finding effective ways to discipline your child, kidsdr.com contains several stories with positive discipline strategies. Just type in the word "discipline" in the search bar.

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Relief During Allergy Season
The surge in allergies this year has been due to a very wet winter and the weather this spring has brought erratic temperatures and lots of wind. The perfect storm for the "allergic cascade" to inflict itself on everyone's nasal mucosa. The best preventative for nasal allergy symptoms (allergic rhinitis) has been the use of intranasal steroids. These steroid sprays have been used for the past 15 years and clinical studies have shown that intranasal steroids are superior to oral antihistamines. Intranasal steroids function by inhibiting the production of chemical mediators such as histamine and prostaglandin that cause inflammation and mucous production. In other words they are more of a preventative medication, while an antihistamine is treating the histamine that was released once you inhaled the offending tree or grass pollen. Intranasal steroids may also help eye allergy symptoms too. The problem is getting young kids to let you use a nose spray on them. The same holds true for the older tween and teen crowd who complain that they "just don't have the time to use it everyday" (it must take all of 15 seconds to use on yourself!) They have been shown to be effective within 3-12 hours, although will reach their maximum effectiveness after several days to weeks of use, so using it daily and throughout the allergy season is going to give you the maximum therapeutic effect. There are many different brands available and everyone seems to have their favorite. If one spray seems to bother your child due to scent, or intensity of the spray ask your doctor to try another brand. Many times they will have a sample and give you several to try and then prescribe the one that is easiest to get your child to use. It may be trial and error, but finding the right nasal steroid may just change your allergy season. That's your daily dose, we'll chat again tomorrow. Oh, God Bless You! Send your question to Dr. Sue!
Empowered Moms
Let's face it, it's tough being a mom in today's world. There is so much pressure we place on ourselves in the hopes we are making the right decisions when it comes to raising our children.
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About Sue Hubbard, M.D.

Dr. Sue Hubbard is an award winning pediatrician and medical editor for www.kidsdr.com.  She is a native of Washington, D.C. who travelled south to attend the University of Texas at Austin and never left. Read More

 
 
 
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