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Child sexual abuse accommodation syndrome (CSAAS) is a syndrome proposed by Roland C. Summit in 1983 to describe how he believed sexually abused children responded to ongoing sexual abuse. He said children "learn to accept the situation and to survive. There is no way out, no place to run.
Child Welfare, 64(4): 343–356, July–August 1985. (co-authored with C. Richardson and P. Martin) Treating Child Sex Offenders and Victims. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 1988 "Response to the 'Abuse of the child sexual abuse accommodation syndrome.'" Journal of Child Sexual Abuse. V. 1(4), pp. 173–177, 1992.
"Child sexual abuse accommodation syndrome is used to justify any statement made by a child as an indication that sexual abuse had occurred—immediate disclosure was an indication of abuse, as are delayed disclosure, withdrawal and sustained denial." Again, this also needs to be worded better and in less POV terms IMO.
Roland C. Summit, a medical doctor, defined the different stages the victims of child sexual abuse go through, called child sexual abuse accommodation syndrome. He suggested that children who are victims of sexual abuse display a range of symptoms that include secrecy, helplessness, entrapment, accommodation, delayed and conflicted disclosure ...
As part of her job at CII, MacFarlane interviewed 400 children for the McMartin preschool trial using anatomically correct dolls and hand puppets. MacFarlane believed that the children suffered from child sexual abuse accommodation syndrome, and would deny sexual abuse without special techniques designed to encourage disclosure. [7]
ohn C. McGinley with wife Nichole and daughters Kate (left) and Billie and son Max at the Global Down Syndrome Foundation's 9th annual Be Beautiful Be Yourself Fashion Show in Denver on Nov. 11, 2017.
In 1997, psychology professor Bruce Rind of Temple University and doctoral student Philip Tromovitch of the University of Pennsylvania published "A meta-analytic review of findings from national samples on psychological correlates of child sexual abuse", a literature review in The Journal of Sex Research of seven studies regarding adjustment problems of victims of child sexual abuse (CSA).
Federal officials say a Fort Valley mom wasn’t given a ground-floor apartment, which kept her from being able to properly care for her disabled child.