J Health Soc Policy
November 1999
Literature points out that there are no socioeconomic differences for victims and perpetrators of sexual abuse in families. It also states that sexual abuse is a "silent disease" and epidemiological data has only recently been available, however, research also convincingly shows that sexual abuse leads to severe post-traumatic and long-term pathological social, psychological, emotional, mental, physical and educational problems for the victim in the school, family, relationship formation and community participation. Ignored in many cases, careful planning is essential to develop a training policy and workshops for teachers and health care workers to recognize the possibility and address the issue of sexual abuse and treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Health Soc Policy
February 1994
Personal wellness not only is a matter of physical well-being. It is also based on financial security and planning. This is the case in making decisions about one's own personal health care system provisions.
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