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Fourth National Incidence Study of Child Abuse and Neglect (NIS–4)

Fourth National Incidence Study of Child Abuse and Neglect (NIS–4)

Fourth National Incidence Study of Child Abuse and Neglect (NIS–4)

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hierarchy comprises other adults known to be unrelated to the child, accounting foranother 3.0% <strong>of</strong> the children. Other individuals (who may or may not have been adults)make up the last category, which represents the most closely related perpetrator for only0.2% <strong>of</strong> the Harm St<strong>and</strong>ard children.Because <strong>of</strong> the small numbers <strong>of</strong> children in the database whose most closelyrelated perpetrators were persons other than their biological parents, the perpetratorcategories described above were further consolidated into 3 major groupings for theanalyses here, as shown by the brackets in Table 6–1: 92• Biological parent(s): includes both in-home <strong>and</strong> out-<strong>of</strong>-homebiological parents;• Nonbiological parents or parents’ partners: includes step-parents,<strong>and</strong> other nonbiological parents, such as foster parents,separated/divorced spouses <strong>of</strong> parents not biologically related to thechild, <strong>and</strong> parents’ boyfriends or girlfriends (partners); <strong>and</strong>• Others: includes all other adults (both those who were <strong>and</strong> those whowere not family members) as well as other perpetrators (persons whoseadult status or whose relation to the child was unclear, persons whowere clearly not adults including relatives <strong>of</strong> the child, <strong>and</strong> otherswhose identity was unknown).6.2.1 Perpetrator’s Relationship to the <strong>Child</strong> for DifferentMaltreatment CategoriesThe first two columns in Table 6–2 show the most closely related perpetratorfor children with each category <strong>of</strong> maltreatment. The bottom-most section in this tablecorresponds to the bracketed categories shown in Table 6–1, again showing thatbiological parents were the perpetrators for the majority <strong>of</strong> children (81%) <strong>and</strong> that92 The majority <strong>of</strong> children maltreated by biological parents were maltreated only by biological parents.That is, the group <strong>of</strong> children who experienced Harm St<strong>and</strong>ard maltreatment by a biological parent (81%in Table 6–1) includes the 72% <strong>of</strong> all children with Harm St<strong>and</strong>ard maltreatment who were maltreatedonly by a biological parent, another 6% who were maltreated by a biological parent as well as by anonbiological parent or their parent’s partner, <strong>and</strong> another 2% who were maltreated by a biological parentas well as by someone else, not a nonbiological parent or their parent’s partner.6-4

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