A major study to be released today by domestic violence campaigner Rosie Batty has found that more than one million children are harmed by other people’s drinking.
One million Australian children abused, attacked, witnessing alcohol-fuelled violence, left unsupervised, intimidated, terrified.
It’s a deeply distressing statistic – and one that everyone in Australia needs to comprehend. The scourge of alcohol related violence and family disruptions is a modern day phenomenon threatening to destroy lives if it isn’t combatted.
The report produced by the Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education (FARE) and the Centre for Alcohol Policy Research (CAPR), The hidden harm: Alcohol’s impact on children and families, reveals the full extent of alcohol-related family and domestic violence in Australia.
It found that almost half of domestic violence incidents and 47% of child protection cases involved alcohol.
It found that more than 10,000 Australian children are in the child protection system because of a carers drinking.
It found that lives were being lost and that at the greatest risk were our children.
Shockingly the statistics – which do not include Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania and the ACT – showed there were at least 30,000 incidents of alcohol related domestic violence reported to police each year.
It found that many families who experienced harm from alcohol had a problem drinker who consumed 11-14 drinks about three to five times a week. In one family the problem drinker was a teenager who was drinking three bottles of vodka a day.
The teenage drinker’s mother told researchers “He knows how to work the system and it’s ripping his sister apart because we said we would stand by him, get him out of jail, stand by him, put a roof over his head for a fresh start on the condition he stayed away from alcohol, and he’s broke that and he’s up to three bottles of vodka a day.”
The report found a systematic repetition to the violence with half of adult respondents harmed in 2008 also harmed in 2011 and 35 per cent of children harmed in 2008 continued to be harmed in 2011.
Of the one million children impacted by other people’s drinking the consequences for them was severe. Interviews revealed that children witnessing verbal or physical conflict, quite often or witnessed drinking or inappropriate behaviour.
Children were also verbally abused, left in an unsupervised or unsafe situation, physically hurt or exposed to domestic violence because of others’ drinking.
And the main culprit in this violence was in most cases the child’s father.
Robin Room, Director, Centre for Alcohol Policy Research, Turning Point Alcohol & Drug Centre wrote for The Conversation that in any given year 367 Australians die because of another’s drinking, and 13,660 are hospitalised. An estimated 19,443 substantiated child protection cases involve a carer’s drinking.
The director of the McCusker Centre for Action on Alcohol and Youth, Professor Mike Daube told The Guardian that given the Prime Minister had flagged domestic violence to be on the next Council of Australian Governments agenda, alcohol’s contribution should be a key part of that discussion.
“If ever a report deserved to be described as a wake-up call, this is it,” he said.
“The report shows the massive impacts of alcohol on others – especially children, women and families who are least able to protect themselves.
The Alcohol and Drug help
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Additional Support
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National:
Kids Helpline :1800 55 1800
Lifeline: 13 11 14.
Domestic Violence hotline : 1800 737 732.
Top Comments
I hope this will bring about much needed social change, I grew up in a family with a father who was a violent alcoholic, it was horrible and the dysfunction that was our family, leaves deep wounds, even up to the age I am now. Rosie baBatty is an incredibly brave woman, who has shared her pain with the world to bring about change x Thankyou Rosie xxx
I think in Australia many people drink to get drunk, rather than as a part of socialising and eating. The aim is to get shitfaced. Australia's biggest drug problem by far