Protecting Children from Sexual Assault
Make sure you know what adults and older children are doing
when they are with your child.
Most sexual abusers are known to you and your child.
They are most often family members, friends, and caretakers
rather than "strangers."
Be cautious of adults who:
- Spend large amounts of time with children if it is not
part of their job.
- Flirt with your child.
- Make your child uncomfortable or whom your child tries
to avoid.
- Abuse drugs or alcohol.
- Physically abuse their wives.
- Have been convicted of a previous sexual offense.
Support your child's right to say "no" to unwanted
touching.
- Let your child know that he can say "no" to touching by
anyone, even a relative who hugs or kisses your child
in a way the child does not like.
- Watch for bullying by an older child.
- Take your child's complaints seriously. Help come up
with solutions.
Refuse to leave your child with adults you do not trust.
Do not leave your child with these adults even if your lack
of trust is "just a feeling." Sexual offenders often do not
look or behave differently from nonoffenders.
Screen babysitters and day care providers.
- If your sitter is an older child or young adult, talk
with the sitter's parents to get a sense of how
responsible he or she is. Ask for references.
- Let the sitter know that your child does not keep secrets
from you.
- Talk with the sitter and your child when you return about
how their time together went.
Screen day care centers and preschools.
- Observe your child at the day-care center or preschool.
- Ask for references.
- Make sure that you can visit the center or preschool at
any time without making an appointment.
- Talk with other parents whose children attend the center
or preschool.
- Make sure you know about planned outings before they happen.
Talk to your child about sexual abuse.
- Clarify the vocabulary.
- Make clear what you mean by words and phrases such as
"hurt," "get into trouble," or "fool around."
- Teach your children the correct names for sexual body
parts, such as the penis and vagina. If you use the
term "private parts," make sure that both you and
your child know what private parts are.
- If you are uncomfortable or tense talking about sexual
issues with your child, let your child know this.
Discuss these issues as best as you can.
- Avoid confusion between healthy sex and sexual abuse.
- Talk about healthy sex separately. Do not talk
about healthy sex and sexual abuse at the same time.
- Help your child understand what healthy sex is,
keeping it appropriate to his or her age. Define
healthy sex as touching that both people want and
that occurs only between adults.
- Define sexual abuse as the kind of touching that can
feel bad to the child because the child does not want
it, is confused about it, or was tricked into it.
- Explain sexual abuse.
- Gear your explanation to your child's age.
- Begin by explaining unwanted, confusing, or secret
touches.
- Talk about the touch being sexual. For example,
"Someone may try to touch your vagina when you do not
want them to."
- Be specific. This will make it less frightening and
confusing. For example, "Someone might try to put
his hands down your pants or might keep rubbing up
against you or might undress in front of you for no
good reason."
- Clarify with your child that sexual abuse is not
likely to happen and that most adults and older
children are good people.
- Talk about who.
- Explain that it may be someone your child already
knows.
- Explain that even nice people, like the people your
child knows, can do bad things. Some people may not
even realize that what they are doing is bad.
- Explain that it may be a person who gives your child
something in return for your child's involvement.
For example, "I'll let you watch TV if you undress
for me and don't tell."
- Explain that it may be a person who threatens or
tries to scare your child. For example, "If you
don't lie down with me, I'll hit your sister."
- Explain that it may be a person who asks your child
to keep a secret.
- Answer your child's questions about puzzling adult
behavior.
- Talk about secrets.
Let your child know he or she should keep no secrets
from you. Explain the difference between a scary
"secret," which may involve something "bad," and a
"surprise," which is usually "good."
Written by Lawrence R. Ricci, MD.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2006 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.