Are Victims of Child Abuse Safer at Home?

Are Victims of Child Abuse Safer at Home?

Child Abuse/Child Sex Trafficking online on the rise during COVID-19 stay-at-home advisories, quarantines

April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month

With the stay-at-home advisory and home quarantines in place for many, the threat of child abuse at home and sex trafficking online is at an all-time high.

Elizabeth Melendez Fisher Good, CEO Selah Way, and Selah Freedom, two of the nation’s leading anti-sex trafficking organizations and author of Groomed (HarperCollins/Thomas Nelson), hopes to help equip those who are practicing social distancing–neighbors, postal delivery workers, delivery persons and more–with information that could help them spot abuse from a distance.

Abuse prevention hotlines are seeing less child abuse cases reported because many of the people who would make reports, such as school teachers or school counselors, even neighbors, are not in regular contact with children who are at risk.

Child abuse risk higher during coronavirus outbreak:

  • There is an exponential number of sites promoting child porn.
  • Types of child abuse include neglect, physical injury, mental and emotional injury, sexual abuse, threats of harm and sex trafficking recruitment through the internet.
  • Children and teens who are isolated in their home sequestered with their abusers will lose a safe space to call for help.

Isolation as it relates to pornography and sex traffic recruitment:

  • 8- to 12-year-olds spend six hours on technology/media every day.
  • 13- to 18-year-olds spend nine hours on tech/media every day.
  • Pornography gets more visitors each month than Netflix, Amazon, and Twitter combined.
  • Teen porn continues to be in the top 10 searched porn categories.
  • The average age of first exposure to pornography is 11 years old. 93% of adolescent boys have viewed porn and 62% of girls.

How people who are social distancing can help spot abuse from afar:

  • An apparent lack of supervision.
  • Bruising around the arms and neck are instant red flags. However, many abusers are wise enough to only leave marks where they will be covered by clothing.
  • Parents staying at home with children can monitor which web pages and streaming movies kids are viewing online.

Elizabeth Melendez Fisher Good, author of Groomed (HarperCollins/Thomas Nelson) is the CEO and co-founder of Selah Freedom and the Selah Way Foundation, which exists to prevent sexual abuse, exploitation, and sex trafficking of children and young adults. Her leadership has brought freedom to thousands of American children and young adults who have been rescued from the sex trade, and she has helped educate millions on the topics of exploitation and sex trafficking. She speaks and trains internationally and is passionate about protecting our youth from the secrets of abuse that so many are forced to keep. Fisher’s family is her true pride and joy. She has three beautiful children and lives with her husband in Sarasota, Florida.

 

 

 

 

 

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Cynthia Tait

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