* No there are no correct statistics on abused men because they seldom report it as abuse is generally connected to women and most of the sympathy goes to women, although that is changing and there are abuse groups for men now. Good men are brought up never to hit a woman so if his partner is physically or mentally abusive the man will take the punishment and is generally too embarrassed to discuss it with family members or friends for fear they will be looked upon as weak. The woman has no more right than a man to be physically or verbally abuse. Phone your Mental Health and they will lead you to the programs you can join where other men are in the same situation.
There are no true statistics of women who abuse men because decent men who know they shouldn't hita woman or be verbally abusive back to their spouse do not report abuse as often as women for fear that they will be labeled as being weak. Men don't talk to other male friends about being abused as most men think they should be able to handle a woman. Easier said than done!
See related links.
No reliable statistics are compiled or available. With little exception, virtually ALL convicted criminal offenders claim they were 'wrongly accused."
because who is their to abuse them.
It depends on the type of abuse. Verbal abuse tends to be women a bit more than men and physical is definiately men more than women. It depends on the type of abuse. Verbal abuse tends to be women a bit more than men and physical is definiately men more than women.
It would depend on the type of abuse. Verbal abuse may in fact be women, but physical and sexual would most certainly be men.
Any form of spouse abuse is major, abuse is abuse and no one has any rite to abuse any one or anything.
It would depend on the type of abuse. Verbal abuse may in fact be women, but physical and sexual would most certainly be men.
One can find reliable drug abuse statistics online in websites like Wikipedia. It offers many different drug abuse statistics: by type of drugs, age of abusers and many other filters.
Most definitely not. Abuse is abuse, in all forms.
It's only been in the past few years that the battered male syndrome has gotten serious attention. The latest percentage of battered men was placed at approximately 36% or roughly 835,000 of the 2.3 million abuse cases reported yearly. Researchers believe that those figures are far from accurate for the obvious reason that most men are very reluctant to admit they have been victims of abuse. See related link Annette's Story
The act increased federal resources for the prosecution of men who abuse women.