viernes, 12 de febrero de 2016

Teen Dating Violence Awareness & Prevention Month | CDC Online Newsroom | CDC

Teen Dating Violence Awareness & Prevention Month | CDC Online Newsroom | CDC

CDC. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. CDC 24/7: Saving Lives. Protecting People.



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Teen Dating Violence Awareness & Prevention Month



Dating violence can happen to teens in a romantic or sexual relationship anytime, anywhere. But it doesn’t have to happen at all. A healthy relationship is built on respect and is free of violence.
Teen dating violence is the physical, sexual, psychological, or emotional violence in a dating relationship, including stalking. It happens in person and electronically with current or former partners.
This problem is widespread with serious effects. However, many teens don’t report it because they’re afraid to tell friends and family.
  • Of students who reported dating, 21% of girls and 10% of boys reported experiencing physical violence and/or sexual violence from a dating partner in the past 12 months.
  • 23% of females and 14% of males who ever experienced rape, physical violence, or stalking by an intimate partner first experienced some form of partner violence between ages 11 and 17.
CDC’s initiative Dating Matters®: Strategies to Promote Healthy Teen Relationships promotes respectful, nonviolent relationships among youth in high-risk, urban communities. Dating Matters supports prevention strategies in schools and neighborhoods and with families, using comprehensive, evidence-based and evidence-informed practices to reduce the burden of teen dating violence.
Communicating, managing uncomfortable emotions like anger and jealousy, and treating others with respect keep relationships healthy and nonviolent. Dating violence is preventable when teens, families, organizations, and communities come together and implement effective prevention efforts. Learn how.
Positive family relationships give kids lifelong skills to develop relationships with others based on trust and respect.



Contact Information

CDC Media Relations
(404) 639-3286media@cdc.gov

Spokespersons

"It isn’t enough to tell young people not to engage in violent behaviors. We have to teach young people what healthy relationship behaviors are and give them the skills to use them if we want to help them engage in respectful, safe relationships.
As parents, educators, and community members, it’s up to us to model respectful relationships and to give adolescents the skills and guidance needed to build respectful, violence-free relationships throughout their lives."
Phyllis Holditch Niolon, PhD - Acting Special Assistant to the Associate Director of Science in the Division of Violence Prevention

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