Print Comment Email Men often victims of sexual assault
Ashley Oliver, CT News Reporter
Tuesday, October 2; 10:45 PM
In a May 2007 study, the Centers for Disease Control found that more than 800,000 males in the United States are raped or physically assaulted by their female partners every year.

The National Coalition of Free Men (NCFM) is expressing concern during domestic violence awareness month this October that this study has been unfairly ignored because of the media's gender stereotyping.

The organization looks at the way sex discrimination affects both boys and men and focuses on a number of different issues, including male victims of domestic violence.

"The media has been misframing domestic violence for too long and there is just not enough awareness about male victims," said Marc Angelucci, President of the Los Angeles chapter of NCFM. "The media tends to use unreliable crime data and ignore sociological data which is much more accurate."

Because the media has been accused of distorting the general publics' view of domestic violence, the NCFM is worried that men won't come forward when they are the victims of violence by their intimate partner.

"We need to educate the public that male victims are not alone and are not wimps, and that they need to seek help and report it," Angelucci said. "They are in more danger than they think."

NCFM is concerned that male victims will maintain their silence and that the problem will continue and add to the overall cycle of domestic violence.

"They have no outreach and few services, and they continue to just 'take it like men' until someone gets hurt," Angelucci said.

This year's CDC report counters any ideas about men not being assaulted by female partners or injured because of Intimate Partner Violence (IPV). The NCFM is determined to make people aware of this in hopes of dissolving the stereotype that females almost always fall victim to male criminals.

"It's important that the public is aware that domestic violence is happening in both directions and at significant levels; that it is not just a male crime, and that it is damaging no matter what gender commits it," Angelucci said.

CDC studies show the gravity of IPV for men and women alike. In the year 2004, IPV resulted in 1,544 deaths with 25 percent being men. Updated in 2003, the corporate cost of IPV in the United States was $8.3 million from medical care, mental health services and lost productivity.

"Children are damaged just by witnessing (domestic violence) regardless of the severity," Angelucci said.

Experts from various domestic violence organizations agree that children who live in an environ-ment where IPV is present are more likely to carry it into their own family than children who grow up with parents in a healthy relationship.

In order to prevent IPV altogether, it's important to prevent a physical, emotional, threatening, or sexual issue from even emerging between couples in the first place.

According to the CDC fact sheet on domestic violence reports, "Strategies that promote healthy dating relationships are important. These strategies should focus on young people when they are learning skills for dating."

Add your opinion
Posted by: Sreya at 12/15/07 Men are victims of domestic violence and I don't recall anyone ever having claimed otherwise, but it is women who typically sustain greater injuries in domestic violence situations because they lack the strength to physically stop the attacker. That is fact. I have read many stories of women and girls being attacked or abducted by men they don't know and raped, tortured, mutilated and murdered. Ever heard of groups of women gang raping boys or men? What about serial killers? Almost all are men. People claiming that it is men who suffer greater abuses at the hands of women than women suffer at the hands of men are a bit like holocaust deniers. Flag Abuse
Posted by: Fidelbogen at 10/28/07 What's clear to me is that there is now a ton of evidence suggesting that women are, generally speaking, as bad as men in the realm of Intimate Partner Violence. However, I am willing to allow that this is still a subject of controversy. What I mean is, that I willing to exercise liberality toward the feminists by not compelling them to discard their belief system outright. But if they are not prepared to join me on my side of the fence, I still think it would be a civilized gesture on their part if they would embrace an "agnostic" standpoint, and chill out for a while! In practical terms, that means they should CEASE AND DESIST from repeating certain information as "fact", e.g. "Men commit 95% of all DV". That is NOT a "fact", but only an assertion that certain people insist on making despite serious evidence of its untruth. However, as I have stated, I am willing to meet the feminists halfway. They should have the decency to admit that they MIGHT be wrong, and then stop spreading this sort of questionable data in such a dogmatic tone of voice. They should adopt a "wait and see" attitude, and insist that further studies be conducted (under the most rigorous scientific standards) so that we can get to the bottom of this business once and for all! In the meantime, once again, the order of the day should be agnosticism all around! I think I am being more than generous............... http://counterfem.blogspot.com Flag Abuse
Posted by: Matt at 10/09/07 The best way to avoid being abused domestically is not be domestic. Live single, folks. No marriage, no divorce. No domesticity, no DV. It makes a lot of sense. Stay single, live alone or with platonic housemates. Flag Abuse
Posted by: Aarde V. Atheian at 10/05/07 For ten years from 1987 to 1997 I tried to report my wife’s daily beating of our children and her violent behavior with me to every police or social service or the Courts station in Los Angeles that I could find. Our children were terrified of their mother and would be beaten by her every day just as they’d see me enduring her blows. Every one of them would say you have no recourse other than divorce, there’s no domestic violence intervention for men. I finally decided to file for divorce. I regretted the day that I listened to those heartless people It turned out that they had truly and cruelly misguided me because as of that day and unto this day I have been prohibited from seeing our children even though our children were treated for psychosomatic syndrome of Can’t-speak & Can’t-hear type the day that they were separated from me. That’s how cruel it is for our children and ourselves to try to do something about female domestic violence. Flag Abuse
Posted by: Marc Angelucc at 10/05/07 This is a response to PO. The website you just cited says this: "In the United States every year, about 1.5 million women and more than 800,000 men are raped or physically assaulted by an intimate partner." That makes men at least 36% of the victims. And that is partly based on crime data so even that is inaccurately low because men are less likely than women to see it as a crime. The newspaper did make a slight mistake. The May 2007 study actually found that violence in one-fourth of heterosexual couples, half of which was reciprocal, and 'in nonreciprocally violent relationships, women were the perpetrators in more than 70% of the cases' while men suffered significant injuries. http://www.ajph.org/cgi/content/abstract/97/5/941 http://pn.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/42/15/31-a In fact, virtually all sociological data shows women initiate domestic violence as often as men and men suffer one-third of injuries the injuries. California State University Professor Martin Fiebert maintains an online bibliography summarizes over 200 studies that confirm this at http://www.csulb.edu/~mfiebert/assault.htm A recent 32-nation study by the University of New Hampshire confirmed this and found women are as controlling as men in relationships worldwide, in rich and poor nations. http://www.unh.edu/news/cj_nr/2006/may/em_060519male.cfm?type=n http://pubpages.unh.edu/~mas2/ID41E2.pdf I invite you to look at those figures. They come straight from University website and very credible sources. I challenge you to a debate on this issue right here. A University of Florida study recently found women are more likely than men to “stalk, attack and abuse” their partners. http://news.ufl.edu/2006/07/13/women-attackers/ The University of Washington recently found similar results in their own research. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/06/070625111433.htm A recent study in the Journal of Family Violence found many male callers to a national hotline experienced high rates of severe forms of violence from female partners who used violence to control them. http://www.springerlink.com/content/a7q0032j88817218/fulltext.pdf A University of Pennsylvania emergency room report found 13% of men reported being assaulted by a female partner in the previous 12 months, of which 50% were choked, kicked, bitten, punched, or had an object thrown at them, 37% involved a weapon, and 14% required medical attention, at http://www.aemj.org/cgi/content/abstract/6/8/786 University of Pennsylvania Professor Richard Gelles states: 'Contrary to the claim that women only hit in self-defense, we found that women were as likely to initiate the violence as were men,' in his article reprinted at http://www.ncfmla.org/gelles.html This data is recognized by the American Psychological Association. http://www.apa.org/monitor/oct06/pc.html This Canadian government report also recognizes the above data. http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/ncfv-cnivf/familyviolence/pdfs/Intimate_Partner.pdf Archer, J., 'Sex differences in aggression between heterosexual partners: A meta-analytic review,' Aggression and Violent Behavior (7) 2002, 313-351, http://www.maennerbuero-trier.de/Archer_2002.pdf Dutton, D., & Corvo, K., 'Transforming a flawed policy: A call to revive psychology and science in domestic violence research and practice,' (11) 2006, 457-483, http://www.nfvlrc.org/docs/DuttonCorvo.policypaper.pdf For years the public has been given a false model of domestic violence that puts political correctness over social science and ignores male victims, leaving them with no outreach and few services, and they just 'take it' while their children suffer long-term damage by the exposure. This is a serious but hidden problem, and a global coalition of concerned experts recently formed in an effort to combat it. Their website is at www.nfvlrc.org/ Flag Abuse
Posted by: po at 10/05/07 This article just parrots the press releases of the men' rights group NCFM. The author didn't even bother to change the text from their web site http://www.ncfm.org/about-ncfm.php nor did she read the CDC data that supposedly supports their claims. Sexual assaults upon men (per 100,000 citizens) in 2006: 6,424. Against women: 64,872 Look here for more information: http://www.cdc.gov/ncipc/factsheets/ipvfacts.htm Flag Abuse
Posted by: David at 10/04/07 This is just one more report showing that women consistently are abusive, are abusers, and are violent within relationships and families. The Violence Against Women Act 2005 held congressional hearings where NONE of this data was allowed in the testimony. WHY? To ensure the protection of feminist pork? Flag Abuse
Posted by: Fred Hayward at 10/04/07 Wow, it was so good to read this article. That huge numbers of men are physically assaulted by domestic partners is a fact that has been well-documented for a long time. What gets me is the irony of a movement which touts "Break the Silence!" as their slogan...and then does everything it can to "MAINTAIN the Silence!" about female violence and male victimization. Flag Abuse
Posted by: Darrin at 10/03/07 To see just how much research there is concerning male victims of domestic violence, just go to http://www.mediaradar.org (most notably the report by martin fiebert). For every feminist issue there is a masculist one. For example, women tend to be objectified by their looks and men tend to be objectified by their status or earning potential. Women tend to be held back intellectually and men tend to be held back emotionally. Gender roles restrict us all! Flag Abuse
Posted by: Dominique at 10/03/07 I would encourage everyone reading this to attend the Clothesline Project on the Drillfield - October 9th and 10th. Men and women in the Virginia Tech and Montgomery County communities can make shirts at the Woman's center in a safe, anonymous setting, to represent their experience with violence. The shirts create a moving display, it's as if all the survivors of violence are standing together. It's important to acknowledge that anyone can be affected by violence, sexual or non-sexual. Flag Abuse
Posted by: John Hellriegel at 10/03/07 I just wanted to take a moment and thank you for the article “Men often victims of sexual assault.” Conversations that concern men’s emotional, physiological, and physical health and general well-being have been forbidden topics in our culture for far too long. I am glade to see that your paper has the courage to spearhead theses taboo issues!!! Flag Abuse
Posted by: Stonewall at 10/03/07 The fact that women are just as violent in families as men has been known since the landmark National Family Violence Survey of 1975. This fact has been suppressed by the media, who have chosen to simply parrot misleading and outright false figures given them by feminists. The Violence Against Women Act is premised on a lie, and in fact is used to perpetuate the lie that men are the abusers and women need special protection. Flag Abuse
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