Bullying A 2012 survey by the
Interactive Autism Network found that 63% of
autistic children are bullied in the United States. Over a third of Autistic adults said they had been bullied at work in a survey by the UK's
National Autistic Society. 82% of children with a learning disability in the UK are bullied, according to
Mencap, and 79% are scared to go out in case they are bullied. A survey that was done shows that roughly seven out of ten disabled people have been abused, and that it is an ongoing problem. It was found that bullying people with disabilities is a problem in various other countries, and lacks attention.
Sexual abuse According to Valenti-Hein & Schwartz, only 3% of sexual abuse cases involving developmentally disabled people are ever reported; more than 90% of developmentally disabled people will experience sexual abuse at some point in their lives, and 49% will experience 10 or more abusive incidents. A study published in the
British Journal of Psychiatry by Sequeira, Howlin, & Hollins found that sexual abuse is associated with a higher incidence of psychiatric and behavioural disorder in people with learning disabilities in a case-control study. Sexual abuse was associated with increased rates of mental illness and behavioural problems, and with symptoms of post-traumatic stress. Psychological reactions to abuse were similar to those observed in the general population, but with the addition of stereotypical behavior. The more serious the abuse, the more severe the symptoms that were reported. Sexual abuse is less likely to be reported by disabled individuals. The people that surround these individuals are often found to be less likely to report these cases of abuse. Many societies still view disabled people as weak and vulnerable, making it easy for the abuser to feel no remorse or to shift the blame away from themselves. More often than not, people figure they can trust their physicians or doctors who provide care for these individuals. In a clinical study it was found that the physicians would provide poor quality of care to individuals with disabilities. They would suppress the problems instead of addressing them by giving them drugs to make them be quiet. It was also found that physicians were less likely to report sexual abuse or any abuse that they found present on these individuals. They justified these actions by believing that disabled people are less valuable.
Institutional abuse Institutional abuse overwhelmingly impacts disabled people, as intellectually disabled people and physically disabled people often live in institutional settings. Hospitals and care homes can both be settings where abuse occurs. Severe disability is a factor that increases the likelihood of
elder abuse and neglect in nursing homes in Portugal. == Impacts of abuse ==