Chapter 6 - Life long impact of out of home care
"It is impossible to give to someone what you have never had
yourself"
Today I had a fight with my stepson and tried
to throttle and head butt him as this is the only way I know how to react. He
calls me a loser because I never held a job for very long or couldn't get one.
I've finally realised he is right because at the age of 48 I am a reformed
alcoholic and drug addict, a violent person (physically and mentally) who can't
hold a job, has no friends and has already had a trial separation from his
second wife because she couldn't deal with the constant arguing and agro. I
lived in my 18-year-old car for three months because I had no money because I
don't know how to deal with it. And have an intense hate for this society and
its religions and a constant thoughts of suicide. The only reason I am still
alive is because Jesus has claimed me and he won't let me have
revenge on this society. I hate more than anyone could understand and the most
frustrating part is that I have such a great amount of love to give away but I
can't deal with the world long enough to give it.
This is my legacy from the North Coast
Children's Home [Lismore]. (Sub 201)
6.1
The long-term impacts of a childhood spent in
institutional care are complex and varied. In some cases, children were already
suffering from life in a dysfunctional family. However the outcomes for those
who have left care have, in the main, often been significantly negative and
destructive. The following provides an overview of outcomes as presented to the
Committee from the experiences of those who provided evidence during the
inquiry.
6.2
A fundamental, ongoing issue of being raised in care
that was constantly raised in evidence related to the lack of trust and
security, through lack of life and interpersonal skills that are acquired
through a normal family upbringing, especially social and parenting skills.
Reference was constantly made to the skills required to survive in an
institutional setting being quite different and inappropriate for normal social
interaction in the outside world. The issue was put simply:
How do you know how to be a parent if you have never been
parented? How do you know love, if you have never been loved? How do you know
how a normal family functions if you have never been in one? These handicaps
have been far more pervasive and devastating to my life than the experience of
being sexually abused. (Sub 214)
6.3
It is imperative to recognise and acknowledge the
magnitude of contemporary social problems which are the long term effects stemming
from the past experiences of fear, intimidation, humiliation and abuse endured
by the care leaver as a child.
6.4
Submissions refer frequently to a range of legacies
including low self-esteem, lack of confidence, depression, fear and distrust,
anger, shame, guilt, obsessiveness, social anxieties, phobias, recurring
nightmares, tension, migraines and speech difficulties. Many who suffered in
institutions could not cope with life in the 'real' world and have had
life-long alcohol and drug problems or ended in the mental health or prison
systems. Many have difficulties forming and maintaining trust in relationships,
or have remained loners and never married. Some care leavers with emotional
problems have contemplated or taken the ultimate step of suicide. Others have
survived.
No person
can come out of these experiences unscathed and many of the former 'girls' from
the home have had horrible lives. I saw more than one as Street Walkers and was
told about attempts at suicide and destructive relationships. Others have
learned to rely on alcohol and more recently other drugs. None have had
'normal' relationships where they realised their potential both emotionally and
intellectually. (Sub 311)
The consequences are not only limited to me. My wife and two
daughters have to put up with my problems as well and their lives are affected
by my behaviour. I am currently on an anti depressant in order to help me cope
with the trauma I suffer daily as a consequence of my treatment. I suffer from post
traumatic stress disorder which manifests itself in a disorder known as
dissociation. I suffer depression, anxiety, antisocial attitudes, and
nightmares, fear of people, lack of confidence, lack of social skills and a
lack of identity. I have undergone counselling for much of my adult life just
so I could cope with living day to day. I cannot hold a job for long; I cannot
form friendships and have been unable to complete the several educational
courses I have started over the last thirty years. I am currently in such a
state that I rarely leave the house for fear of my reaction to any stimuli.
(Sub 20)
Quality of life
6.5
Those who have left care point to many aspects of their
lives that are the dark legacy of their time in care. Many have carried with
them the stigma of having been in a home.
When I left the home I felt the stigma of being raised as a
state ward, I felt lost and isolated. I didn't admit to being a state ward for
many years and would avoid questions relating to my family and make up a story
to appear "normal". (Sub 33)
6.6
First and foremost was the stigma of being unwanted by
their parents and being seen as second rate citizens for being in a home. This
was often reinforced by carers who denigrated parents and humiliated and
tormented children. Children in homes were made to feel degraded and of less
worth than others.
6.7
Often the denigration continued into school life. Home
children were segregated at school: they often wore ill-fitting, second hand
clothes, and were seen as 'being different' to their peers. They went to school
together, ate together and rarely if ever had friends who weren’t in the home
with them. The stigma of homes has often had an enduring impact on the life of
a care leaver particularly leading to feelings of low self-esteem and self-worth.
6.8
The outcome of serious abuse, assaults and deprivation suffered
by many care leavers has had a complex, serious and negative impact on their
lives. At the most extreme, care leavers have lived a half life tainted by
alienation, isolation and degradation.
I feel it altered my aspect on life, I know it made me more
anxious, submissive and nervous and I let people intimidate me. I feel as if my
spirit had been broken, and it has taken many many years to get my life into
some sort of order. (Sub 236)
My life has been extremely hard, due I believe, to the
treatment meted out to me whilst I was in the care of the Salvation Army. I am
still trying to come to terms with it, I am now on a disability pension, my
health is deteriorating, I have had bypass surgery, suffer with anxiety,
depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder. I have also had ongoing
counselling throughout the years and am still having counselling to this day. I
have had several broken marriages and relationships, find it extremely hard to
trust other people and am a loner. I believe that I am a survivor despite what
happened to me as a child. (Sub 231)
The experience at Parramatta Girls' Home has caused me a
lifetime of depression, low self-esteem, lack of confidence, the inability to
trust people, and fear of authority, particularly the police and social
services. But worse than any of this, my fear of living in Australia
forced me to live apart from my mother. I have not lived in Australia
since 1971. I lost my desire to live in my own country, because it let me down
so badly. (Sub 284)
I struggle with the magnitude at which these institutions'
aftermath has rippled through our society, presenting various consequences. It
is as if our past has no bearing on our future and therefore, doesn't exist.
The memories are part of our surviving; with knowledge we try and understand
how to walk forward. We have survived in a world of judgment with little margin
for error. (Sub 314)
As an adult I have been in psychiatric hospitals with
anxiety attacks for years off and on. I had a drinking problem and I had a drug
problem. I didn't know love. I wasn't able to receive love on any level. I
couldn't cry. I was frightened inside all the time as someone was going to hurt
me. I never knew why, I thought I was mad. I am 54 now and it was only three
weeks ago that I realised it is not me. It is the consequences of childhood.
(Sub 394)
There is a sense for me that I have no 'legitimacy', and
where beginning life in an institution, where you are fed, watered and bathed,
is the overwhelming legacy of that experience, that is what is so hard to live
with. That sort of 'bedrock' is just not enough to develop that crucial sense
of self we all need to carry ourselves through life with any success. (Sub 418)
Relationship problems
6.9
The most profound impact of institutional care that has
flowed into adult life is the difficulty in initiating and maintaining stable,
loving relationships. Without a nurturing environment, with too few, or no,
adults to give love and affection, many care leavers were unable to develop the
skills needed to build mature adult relationships once they had left the
institution behind.
One of the things that we miss out on - we might get our daily
bread - is developing relationship skills that are so necessary for building
the future. We miss out on developing defence mechanisms, being strong enough
as an individual to be able to cope with the knocks and bumps that you receive
when you are in a relationship.[284]
6.10
Many care leavers described multiple relationships and
failed marriages. For some, the first relationship formed after leaving the
institution was grasped at as a means of finding love, affection and support.
Unfortunately, often this only resulted in a failed marriage as the partnership
was entered into for the wrong reasons.
When I was released from Parramatta
I did what I had been accused of doing and immediately fell pregnant, drifted
into a loveless violent marriage. (Sub 263)
6.11
Relationships were often characterised as a desperate search
for love - 'I had never been really loved and that was the most important thing
for me'. Many reported physically and emotionally abusive relationships and marriages
which were tolerated 'because it was more important for me to have someone than
no one'.
6.12
In so many instances a fundamental reason behind
relationship problems and family difficulties is an inability to demonstrate or
express emotion physically or verbally, a direct result of the lack of love,
affection and nurturing as a developing child.
I don't know how to show my family, especially my own
children how I feel about them. I can't put my arms around them and tell them I
love them...and most of my married life I can't stand being touched. (Sub 107)
In my relationships I struggle with trust and choosing
non-abusive partners, and I still have a feeling of low self-esteem, and have
struggles with depression. (Sub 8)
I am unable to maintain a relationship with a man. I could
never understand why with both my marriages to good kind caring men I fell into
the worst depressions and had to leave for my sanity. (Sub 351)
I have never married I would liked to have but feel
embarrassed as I still blame myself with what had happened to me. I still have
to leave the light on in my house every night time. I have flash backs seven
days a week three hundred and sixty five days a year of the people performing
sexual activates on me and I still blame myself for allowing this to happen.
Even so I was only a child. (Sub 106)
I thank the system for denying me the feeling of love, for
the inability to either give or accept it and for the hurt this has caused to
anyone close to me. (Sub 320)
6.13
Those who suffered sexual assault especially struggle
with relationships - 'the incident left me with a real fear of men and problems
having sex, even with my husband...This barrier is still with me to this day'.
Parenting skills
6.14
One of the most disturbing aspects of this inquiry is
the impact on the ability of care leavers to successfully parent and raise
families. The denial of role models and the experience of a loving, nurturing
family life has resulted in many care leavers being ineffective parents. Inadequate
parenting skills are compounded by a lack of trust and self-worth and living
with the impact of childhood experiences and this has often led to family breakdowns
and alienation from children.[285]
The thing that really saddens me is the impact that my
depression and anxiety, post traumatic stress disorder, life long inadequacy,
low self esteem, and trust and fear issues, have had on my children and husband.
I have learned to accept the impact this has all had on my own life, but
when it starts to affect the ones I hold close to my heart, I am left to feel
extreme guilt for something that is totally out of my control and most of all
is not my fault. It is extremely difficult for somebody like me to trust
anybody other than myself to look after my children. Hence this puts us as a
family unit in isolation adding extra stresses. (Sub 98)
6.15
A commonly raised issue was the inability to get close
to children and show love and affection. Some care leavers described an almost
opposite situation where their children have been smothered and spoilt as a
reaction to ensuring that they have everything that the parent was deprived of
as a child.
I find I have immense problems today with parenting. Not
only am I utterly bereft of experience from which to guide my parenting, I find
it difficult to give my children affection, nurturing and positive
reinforcement of the people they are becoming. (Sub 28)
I married young had 2 children. The marriage didn't last,
was it because of my background? Without doubt it would have contributed to it.
I knew so little of what family life
should be like, I know I was incapable of trust I longed for love but was
unable to accept it or know how to give it. I worry what insecurities I have
inflicted on my kids. Have I damaged them
with my inability to reveal myself even to them? That fear of rejection never
leaves. I feel they have suffered by never knowing maternal grandparents/aunts/uncles/cousins.
(Sub 258)
I was unable to spend the time with my family while my
children were growing up. This meant I never got very close to them, because I
never received any affection while growing up in institutions, I found it hard
to return affection to my family. One day they may understand what I went
through. (Sub 319)
Then at the age of 36, I met my wife...We married in 1982 and
had two baby girls within two years. As I was unemployed for 5 years after we
married, and although it was tough, I was able to spend a lot of time with my
daughters. I was determined they weren't going to miss out like I did - I
spoilt them rotten...Dorothy and the girls have
been the making of me. For the first time I experienced happiness. Without them
I think I would be dead now, either through alcoholism or a successful suicide.
(Sub 181)
In raising my kids, I made sure they got a good education. I
had felt frustrated all my life about not being educated properly and I was
damned if my kids were going to suffer the same way. (Conf Sub 44)
6.16
The Committee was also privileged to get a perspective
of life living with a care leaver from families which reinforced the point that
the issues for care leavers flow through to their partners, families, children
and grandchildren.
Perspective from wives and partners
6.17
Wives and partners provided the Committee with an
insight into the lives of care leavers. Often they have had to cope with a
partner who lacks trust, is profoundly angry, suffers from low self-esteem and
is unable to cope with many day-to-day events.
A lot of people think that because my husband has been able
to sustain our relationship and have a family, that he has been able to get on
with his life. The truth is that it has been a very stormy and hard
relationship to maintain, and the only reason I have stayed is because I love
my husband and I have seen a side of him that is not visible to other people...[my
husband] is a very complex person and through helping him to write his letter,
I have come to understand why he is the way he is...No one sees the emotional
roller coaster my husband goes through everyday, and it tears at my heart
knowing what I now know. (Sub 372)
I feel I can comment on how it is to live with someone who
was in institutional care during the formative years of his childhood...He is
constantly anxious about almost everything is often depressed...He has a very
negative approach to life and seems to lack self-esteem, is a great worrier,
and a perfectionist. He can be controlling and tends to be suspicious...He is
very 'house-proud' - he has to make the bed promptly every morning...He is
fanatical and obsessive about cleanliness and tidiness...He also finds it very
difficult to 'reach out' to people and seems unable to show compassion for
others...He is reluctant to mix and socialise generally and enjoys being at home,
pottering around the house and garden and watching television...it is very
difficult to speak about personal matters...He seems cold and impersonal and it
is almost impossible to get close to him or to discuss personal problems with
him (Sub 231, enclosure)
Its hard being the partner some wont stay in the
relationship they just cant because they just don't understand, where they are
coming from...I have got him off the booze and drugs, but I can never fix his
broken heart and the hurt inside and I don't think any one of us can for any
one of these people. We can just be there they need love support someone to
care for them. Someone who will trust in them as a person and don't ever judge
them. (Sub 338)
Perspective from children
6.18
Evidence from children of care leavers was particularly
moving and while many older children now understand why their parents acted as
they did, some experienced many difficulties growing up with a parent who had
been in care.
Growing up as a child is hard enough as it is but when you
have a parent that has been exposed to so much evil, torture, both physical and
mental abuse your life is that much harder. My mother was more than over
protective to the point it became suffocating, I wasn't allowed to play after
school, and on weekends it was rare that I could socialize with my friends,
there were no sleepovers or the usual things kids would do, my weekends were
spent cleaning, cooking and doing household chores... I used to say to her "this is not a military camp were kids mum"...there was hardly ever any
effection, any time I would go to hug her or just put my arm around her she
would push me away. I think that hurt me the most cause I could never understand
why she was like that (at this stage I didn't know what had happened to her). It
wasn't till my mid teens that my mum started to open up and tell us the horror
stories at Lynwood hall.
I started to realize that everything that she was doing was
just a reflection of her childhood. She didn't know any better, she was raised
in an institution where there were rules, regulations punishment and solitary
confinement. Even though she had told us about Lynwood
things didn't really change because it was embedded in her so deep that she is
unable to change...(Sub 261)
I met the 'girls' [mum] grew up with many years later...I
needed to understand mum's story more, in order for me to forgive her for the
abandonment I felt. The fellow orphans had followed similar paths of abusive
relationships, menial labour, alcohol and other drug abuse and mental health
problems...One woman told me she had been raped and only forty years later, the
child who had been adopted out made contact with.
I hadn't been there, but through my mum's blood line I felt
their story in my bones. When they talked about their children, I understood
what their lives must have been like, and just how difficult it is to break
free of the negative impacts of being the offspring of wards of the state. (Sub
195)
At sixteen I was forced to leave home, because my mother had
become an alcoholic, which I believe was her way of coping with the
psychological effects of her tortuous experience at the Home. Although I loved
and admired her in so many ways, especially for being a survivor of a brutal
childhood, I knew if I wanted to survive emotionally, stay at school, pursue a
healthy 'normal' lifestyle I had to do it on my own. This was very traumatic
for me and my two younger sisters who were later 'kicked' out on their
sixteenth birthday. It was over the housework not being done properly. The last
straw was forgetting to empty the bin. This was typical of the rage and
frustration which mum had inflicted upon her during her childhood by the
unmerciful nuns. Fortunately, she was restrained when it came to thinking up
the more sadistic punishments the nuns metered out. Mum didn't have very good
parenting responses to teenage girls - because she herself hadn't been allowed
to develop through constant abuse by the nuns that she was the ‘bastard scum of
the earth’ and only fit for domestic labour, so we too were discouraged from
rising above our station. (Sub 195)
But when you think about it dad was brought up in a home to
and terrible things must of happen to him for the things that he did to us.
(Sub 315)
Generational issues
6.19
The difficulties with establishing and maintaining
relationships, the inability for many to provide secure and stable family environments
for raising children, feelings of shame and fear of rejection about their
childhood history can become cyclical. Each new generation, lacking a sense of
security and parental role models, is unable to provide these vitally necessary
foundations for the next generation.
I became a state ward at the age of about seven. I never saw
any workers. I was never told; I was just made a state ward. I am the third
generation in care; I reared the fourth.[286]
The other thing I want to say is that institutionalisation
has a multigenerational effect. My mother was institutionalised with the
Sisters of Mercy. My father was in one of those institutions where they worked
on a farm, and he was horrendously abused. My daughter is the first in three
generations to stay with her mum. It has been a constant struggle for me, and
she will have effects and does have effects. She is 21, and I am beginning to
see the effects of having a parent like me.[287]
[My children] all have had drug problems from time to time
with one son being in constant incarceration...My children would not have so many
hang ups & certainly my grandson would not be living with my husband &
I because of failed relationships had I had a secure & protected
environment with positive people around me. (Sub 341)
We all are dealing with our own mental health problems
triggered by our experiences with a mother who was emotionally distant,
abusive, alcoholic and full of rage against church and the state. One sister
tried to commit suicide, and got into illegal drug abuse to escape the
emotional pain and the stress of surviving on her own...My other sister shows
signs of repeating the same patterns as mum in the mixed messages of her
parenting, and her gambling addiction which has ruined her marriage and other
relationships. (Sub 195)
It is the consequences of failing lives that should concern
everyone, taxpayers, economists, academics, the justice system, health and
medical professionals, law-enforcement, politicians, because of the
inter-generational nature of outcomes for many who suffer this fate. It is a
problem that has impacted on my own children, an outcome already complicated by
separation, and relationship breakdown. It is an outcome that left one reduced
to living in an old caravan for close to 20 years, and surviving on a
disability pension. A social out-cast. (Sub 401)
They stole our childhood, they stole our lives. My children
are scarred through me.[288]
On-going health issues
6.20
The health status of many care leavers is especially
disturbing. Evidence was received of general physical, psychological and dental
health problems through to severe mental health issues of depression and post
traumatic stress disorder. The consequences of lifestyle for many since leaving
care such as drug and alcohol addictions, homelessness, unemployment, unsafe
sex practices and other destructive behaviours have also had a damaging impact
on their health. For some, they carry the legacy of injuries suffered through
the abuse they received as a child.
The health care needs of those of us who remain as survivors
of this infamous institution are overwhelming. The majority of our people
suffer from varying degrees of mental illness...Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
appears to be one thing we all have in common. Depression and anxiety related
illnesses such as panic attacks and sleep disorders are common as are some
phobic disorders. Poor anger management skills and violent outbursts are a
feature of the social and emotional problems experienced by our people. The men
especially have largely been unable to address the issues relating to their
anger and this is often displayed in their relationships. Hence a high incidence
of domestic violence...
The general health status of the Wilson
survivors is also frightening. We have some cases of HIV, many are Hep C
positive. Those issues coupled with long-term drug and/or alcohol abuse has in
some cases created irreparable damage. (Sub 58)
6.21
Many care leavers reported that they are suffering
physical health problems or disabilities as a result of being assaulted in the
institutions or through lack of medical attention received in their childhood. Ongoing
hearing problems and hearing loss were commented upon by many care leavers who
attributed their condition to being 'boxed' around the ears or having their
head bashed against sinks, walls or each other.
He grabbed a huge hunk of wood, and used that hunk of wood to
strike me across my back several times until he dropped the wood. He then
grabbed me by the back of my pants and the scruff of my shirt, held me above
his head and threw me against the brick wall of the shower block...[My
specialist] said [the back injury] must have happened when you were young
because your disc has continued to grow and a section of that disc had been
severed and it's a lot smaller, (that's how he knew it was an injury done at a
very young age). The injury obviously related to the flogging (Salvation Army,
Box Hill - Sup Sub 296)
My Health. I have only 13 teeth in my mouth, I would like to
get me teeth fixed but I can't afford them on a pension. I have a hearing
problem which I believe came about due to getting a huge whack on my right ear
by Brother Miller, I dropped to the floor and blood was coming out of my ear.
It's very hard to hear anyone who comes on my right side. I have had trouble
going to the Doctor's to get any help for myself, as I am frightened of doctor's.
(Sub 283)
I never received any medical treatment all the time I was at
Neerkol... I still suffer today, 40 years later, extreme pain and limitations of
movement in both of my shoulders as a result of 2 separate accidents that I
suffered whilst in state care and for which I received no medical attention for
either. (Sub 217)
Once, because I hid my sister and refused to tell them where she
was, I received 44 cuts across my legs. The pain always got worse and I have
suffered ever since. We were never taken to a doctor. To date I have had four
operations on my left leg and suffer pain because of these injuries. I have to
live with this. (Scarba House - Sub 95)
Post traumatic stress disorder and
depression
6.22
Mental health issues, depression and post traumatic
stress disorder are commonly experienced by care leavers. These issues can
manifest themselves in a variety of behaviours and actions that affect their
everyday life. The ultimate expression of this problem referred to in many
submissions is post traumatic stress disorder. Many care leavers who have suffered
PTSD have required psychiatric care.
All my life I have carried guilt and felt ashamed because of
what has happened. Being told that I was ugly, black and unwanted has left me
with one big hang-up. People sat on their backsides while children were being
physically, sexually and emotionally abused. I still suffer with extreme
anxiety and stress. The nightmares have eased now, but every now and then I
have a flashback about the orphanage and a wave of nausea hits me - the feeling
of wanting to vomit is really strong and usually I do. The Doctors tell me this
is post-traumatic stress disorder. (Sub 172)
We lived in constant fear. To this day I still have that
fear. I have had counselling over the years, I have also had many visits to a
psychiatrist which has helped for the time being, but the fear and anxiety
returns. I am on treatment for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. (Sub 101)
My Mum...spent years in Psychiatric Institutions due to the
atrocious physical and mental abuse that herself and sister endured for many
years at the cruel hands of the "so called carers" at the Salvation
Army childrens home at Camberwell. Mum told me of many cruel and inhumane
things that happened to herself and her sister. (Sub 267)
Suicide
6.23
A large number of people described holding suicidal
thoughts or actually attempting suicide - 'the thing that scared me the most
was how unexpected it was. I just decided to do it'. The emotional situations exacerbated
by feelings of social isolation and unresolved anger so tragically described in
many submissions were epitomised by the following:
I had had a number of traumatic episodes where I had
undergone severe bouts of depression, anxiety, loneliness, physical and mental
health problems caused by feelings of not belonging and separation trauma. The
stress of feeling the "aloneness" impacted upon me and the compounded
feeling of anger, low self esteem and despair led to try to commit suicide on
two occasions. (Sub 142)
I grew up believing that it was best to forget and to just
accept that I was a bad person who was no good for anything but destroying
lives that these things had happened to me as a punishment from god. Over the
years I had tried to kill myself numerous times, but something deep inside me
kept calling out for justice, for what I did not really understand until now...I
can now understand why I have always felt this way, I am not at fault, the nuns
are, I am not evil or spawn of the devil either. (Sub 5)
6.24
In addition to personally held suicidal feelings, there
was anecdotal evidence provided of an abnormally large percentage of suicides
among care leavers. A great many reported knowing first hand or having been
told of the suicide of friends or of those who had been in the same
institution.
Substance abuse - drug and alcohol
addictions
6.25
As can be seen by many of the comments in this chapter,
resorting to drugs, both licit and illicit, and alcohol was a common practice
to obliterate the past and present pain and suffering. These destructive
behaviours were often undertaken in conjunction with other negative behaviours.
I do not know where my brothers went except that it was to
another home for boys. My brothers will not discuss this issue at all. One has
since died as a result of a drug overdose. Each of my four brothers struggled
with drug addiction...none has had a successful marital relationship. (Sub 412)
When I escaped [at 16] I was a dead set drug addict and my
time at Goodna and Karrala had made me so. I did not know how to function
without drugs. I really did not know how to do too much of anything as I was
convinced that I was stupid, ignorant and ugly and that no one would ever want
me or love me and that I would die in the gutter. These people who were suppose
to care for me had done their job well and finally convinced me that I was
worthless. I ended up living on the streets and was on a path of
self-destruction. (Conf Sub 3)
Compulsive and other behavioural
issues
6.26
A range of compulsive behaviours were described in
evidence. Behaviours included compulsive cleaning, bedmaking and general
tidiness and obsessive hygiene, including showering and bathing and water use.
The children at the school my children went to used to line up
of a Friday night outside the house. I designed the home in Queens
Park in Bondi Junction so that I
could empty it out - except for the bedrooms, which were carpeted - every
Saturday. I would empty out the whole house into the back patio area and soap
it all up inside. I had quarry tiles wall to wall and even around the wall so
that the children could come in, soap it all up and slide through my house.
Then we would hose it out. It is pitiful, really, but we laugh about that now.[289]
In later years, aged 30 or so, I found I could no longer cope
emotionally and psychologically. I was placed in to intensive Psychiatric
Treatment...I was treated for compulsive obsessive water fetish and other
obsessive behaviours and disorders...and Clinical Depression and [am] a chronic
migraine sufferer, all stemmed from anger, resentment, fear, guilt, and shame.
(Sub 203)
6.27
Other witnesses described their obsessions with food.
There was never enough food. I used to always offer to do
the dishes so that I could scrape the pots and eat the scraps. I still scrape
the pots today and it drives my wife and daughters crazy!! (Sub 181)
I was and still am a slow eater and fussy as so many things
remind me of those times. (Sub 151)
6.28
Behavioural issues were raised by people that directly
relate to the treatment they received while in care as a child. These include insomnia,
being light sleepers, suffering nightmares involving childhood incidents and
waking in cold sweats, fear of the dark, needing to leave lights on at night,
not closing or locking doors, being afraid to say 'no', being compliant with
anything asked, overeating, anorexia, or other bizarre patterns of eating or
drinking.
Ongoing problems with anger, grief, identity and self-esteem
6.29
Deep feelings of anger are strongly held by care
leavers. An underlying sense of anger was evident in the contributions of many
care leavers at the public hearings, especially in Brisbane.
For many this sense of anger seems to strengthen with age, as feelings of
abandonment, and of being absolutely and totally alone in their life are
intensified with the passing of the years.
They taught me bitterness, hatred, an abiding repugnance for
their brand of religion, distrust and suspicion of most adults, contempt for
authority in all its forms and intolerance of others. I gained an inheritance
of moral confusion, abiding anger, psychological scars and a determination to
never again allow anyone to treat me as they had; no matter what. Hence I
carried for many years a 'chip on my shoulder' of incredible proportions. It
almost bore me down. (Sub 11)
While I have survived extreme deprivation I am left with
deep emotional scars. I have a sense of abandonment, exploitation and not
belonging. I have undergone a period of therapy to address many of the issues
but feel it impossible to fully recover from my experiences. (Sub 166, p.6)
I left Hillside uneducated and
illiterate. I had few social skills and felt I was a social misfit...The
attitudes and lessons I learnt as a ward of the state handicapped me for life.
I got into trouble with the law. I have been convicted of theft and assault.
The memories of the torment and fear I experienced as a child resulted in drug
abuse, depression and suicide attempts...Today I have to deal with the
consequences of my upbringing as a ward of the state. I have a criminal record
which cannot be undone. I have had a drug problem and have had to seek
counselling and support to address this. I no longer drink or take drugs to
suppress my early memories, which are all the more painful as a result. I have
had to unlearn my violent and aggressive behaviour, through counselling, anger
management courses and life skills training.[290]
6.30
Many people became and remain 'loners', commenting that
they preferred to remain as anonymous as possible because of being so damaged
during their childhood. This has had a powerful impact: from people becoming
housebound who dread simply going outside to do routine activities such as shopping,
to people choosing to live in small, isolated communities.
My marriage failed, I have no communication with three of my
children, I live on my own and have become a real loner. I don't trust people
and I don't let many people near me. I have a wall around myself. (Sub 336)
My Life has been terrible, I've been lonely all my life
until I was 62 years old...I get very angry when something goes wrong in my life,
I fly off the handle quickly and don't know how to handle my feelings of anger.
I've never been in a relationship, cos I didn't know how to go about it. I have
never married. I have trouble trusting people, I don't let people get close to
me. (Sub 283)
Growing up without learning the basic life skills, love and
kindness i feel breeds non functional, anti social, angry law breaking people.
i feel the church should have screened these people much more carefully. i now
am 47 years old and am a hermit. i find it hard to communicate and get very anxious
at times or with other people. i constantly see counsellors and have learned
some life skills and that i am just as important as anyone else. i still feel
angry at the things i had to go through growing up in the home as a state ward.
(Sub 229)
My experience in Pallister Girls Home left indelible
markings on me to this very day. I am still a loner. I still feel unworthy to
be anybody's friend because I still feel I am not good enough for people...To
this very day, when anybody does anything kind towards me or for me, I burst
into tears because I do not believe that I am a good person. (Conf Sub 143)
I also suffer from panic attacks and agoraphobia during the
days. I don't go out unless I have to. I don't go to restaurants, theatres,
large shopping complexes or any other places where there are large numbers or
groups of people. (Sub 217)
Each Christmas, Easter and birthday, I am reminded that I am
a State Ward. At Christmas, I lock myself away and cry because I have no-one to
share it with, not even a family. I have been doing that as long as I can
remember. (Conf Sub 58)
Yes, most of us like to be very isolated. It is something that I
cannot really explain. I live in a little town which would be lucky to have 50
people, yet four of us came out of institutions.[291]
6.31
Powerful feelings of guilt and shame were regularly
expressed emotions by care leavers.
It has taken me 50
years to be able to say I am a former state ward. From age 15 I did
everything in my power to hide my past. I
carried (still do) such guilt & shame I was told nearly every day of my
life I was worthless unlovable, I
believed it. I suffered physical/sexual & emotional abuse. Because
of this harsh early treatment I feel my life has been a huge struggle. (Sub
258)
Having a beginning such as mine also means I fear
'exposure', I guess from the sense of shame I carry...I sat in front of a woman
[at a CLAN meeting] who seemed to carry the same mortal fear as me - and she
put it so succinctly - "I just want to be invisible" is what she
said. I owned that. It's so hard to live every day with that as an overriding
principal in your life. (Sub 418)
6.32
While a feeling of guilt was regularly expressed, a particular
issue was an ongoing sense of guilt over the lack of protection of younger
siblings. An oldest child would see it as their responsibility to look after
younger brothers and sisters after being separated from parents. Just how the
deprivations and treatment experienced in many institutions could possibly be the
fault or responsibility of a young child is totally unimaginable. Yet for some
this issue has had a profound affect.
When Mum's sister would come to visit mum she would have "flash backs" to her time in the home thus worrying that she hadn't
protected her sister enough. Each time she would have another breakdown. (Sub 267)
Eventually my mother remarried and my stepfather [paid to
get us out]...After that episode my brother's attitude changed, I have no idea
what happened to him on his side of the home which we never really talked about
to this day. I use to be able to look out for him but in that home [SA Bexley] I
was powerless. (Sub 382)
6.33
A related emotion was a sense of blame directed towards
parents for not wanting and deserting their children and also among younger
siblings for events which were totally beyond their older sibling's control.
I was about five, he was about three and I wouldn't let his
hand go. One day the staff came along and said your brother has to go to the
dentist and you can't come. I let go of his hand and they took him. That was
the last time I saw him until he was about fourteen. I tracked him down but he
hated me. He blamed me because they took him away. This is the consequence of
the child welfare system. This is how they treated you in these days. My
brother now a mature aged man, still hates me because I let them take him away
all those years ago in Bidura. I am not able to get through to him that I was a
little girl and had no control over the situation. (Sub 394)
6.34
For many people the traumas of a childhood in care did
not appreciably resurface and have their fullest impact until mid-life.
Experiences had been suppressed, but memories were reawakened, often triggered
by related events. Flashbacks and vivid recollections of events from childhood
grow stronger with age.
Until 2000 I was ok, I could hide my memories and live quite
normally. Then the darkness returned, and I am now quite sick with post
traumatic stress and severe social anxiety. I live on the edge of suicide and
remember all the fears and shame I have accumulated over the years.
It took me 23 years to start dealing with this, the past finally
reared its ugly head and tormented me to the point that I was a danger not only
to myself but to society. (Sub 161)
My sister turned to abusive partners; drugs and prostitution,
the same fears and darkness enveloped her. She never had the chance to find
some hope; She was dying from her childhood, just waiting for the end. (Sub 278)
6.35
At least one reassuring aspect of the inquiry was the
positive stories that emerged of people who with a great deal of help,
assistance and understanding are now able to better come to terms with their
past and live fuller and more fruitful lives. Some are blessed with the
experience of happy, fulfilling marriages due in large part to the fortune of
finding loving, caring, patient and understanding partners and gaining strength
and support from their children. This still involves a lot of work from all
parties, often with the use of much counselling.
I often wonder if I hadn't married Warren,
how would my life have turned out. He has encouraged me all my adult life. He
has loved me through all the emotional turmoil, supported me financially and
emotionally when I have wanted to find my family members. I have been truly
blessed in my adult life. Warren
has provided me with the love, stability and encouraged a sense of humour. (Sub
33)
6.36
Those who have triumphed see themselves as survivors.
Unfortunately, not all care leavers can do so.
I could have ended up just another statistic, but I am alive, I am capable
of love, friendship, a profession, I have survived. (Sub 239)
We are living proof. Some of us became survivors but it wasn't
an easy road coming from hell and back (Sub 309)
These notes have only recalled a few of the abuses meted out on
some unfortunate little Australian children, citizens of the future of our
country. I am a survivor, but I know some are not. (Sub 409)
When I did go to school I was there in body but not in soul. My
constant abuse was so severe and my trauma so great it was like I was not there
at all. I spent a lot of time in my own safe little world where I did learn the
most important lesson in life - survival. (Sub 94)
I have had a lot to overcome from my childhood, but have become
a strong person. To survive, I had no other choice. (Sub 185)
I used to feel so alone, like I didn’t belong. But I survived,
but not without emotional scars (Sub 186)
Employment
6.37
Employment for many care leavers has been difficult due
to lack of education and the personality traits that have been carried through
life. Often care leavers are limited to seeking unskilled and low paying jobs.
Eventually I got work. And during the following 20 or so years I
have held down a number of jobs ranging from storeman, console operator, and
security and sales assistant. I am now working as a bus cleaner. (Sub 142)
6.38
There is often a fear of participating in the
recruitment process as many remember the harsh words and attitudes of carers: 'You’ll
never amount to anything.'
There is also a hell of a lot of fear in the workplace that
comes from childhood, when we were punished if we were not perfect. The stigma
attached to being a former resident has a significant impact on securing
employment. For example, you try to better yourself, so you go along and apply
for a job. They give you a form to fill in. Bang! There it is. It jumps out at
you and belts you between the ears. It asks: 'What is your educational
standard?' You just walk away. You do not even bother applying. There never
were any resources to aid job hunting. That has had a very big effect on all of
our people, for which this state stands accused.[292]
6.39
Many care leavers reported a lifetime of financial
hardship having low-paid and menial jobs, of an inability to hold down regular
employment or being unable to secure work and being unemployable. In some
instances, the institutions only thought that care leavers were suitable for
untrained jobs such as domestic staff or farm labourers and did not encourage
children to reach their full potential.
To date I can't hold down a permanent job. I need a casual
job because I have flashbacks. Some are so severe I have to go home...Some days
it's one flashback of horror, others it's moment by moment of hundreds of
feelings, emotions, thoughts...These days are the worst, especially because I'm
working and I have to work because I can't afford to lose my job because I have
to survive. (Sub 246, p.19)
Since leaving school I've had over 50 jobs, the longest
lasting 2 years, this was my last position as manager of a Caravan
Park. (Sub 291)
When a lot of the kids left the orphanages, especially the kids
who were wards of the state, as I think they were called, they were shipped out
to farms, so you never, ever saw them again. That happened to me. I ended up on
a farm, living in a little tin shed and working as slave labour.[293]
6.40
For some, employment difficulties and financial
hardship has led to struggles with social security who they consider do not
understand their circumstances.
I have always had low paid jobs and have no such things as
superannuation or a home. I am on a pension, a disability pension as a
by-product of how I was treated as a child. Last year I had a battle with
social security, they tried to take my pension off me. They told me I could go
back to work. Go back to work with my anxiety attacks and everything that goes
with it. Like my withdrawals and my suicidal tendencies. I have an ongoing
struggle with social security. (Sub 394)
6.41
Many care leavers found reassurance by returning to an
institutional life through joining the military services.
I stayed in the air force for 4 years. There were lots of
good times. I took to the discipline and institutional life like a duck to
water. (Sub 182)
I eventually became institutionalised as all my life I've
had to be in some sort of institution, i.e. the R.A.A.F or the army. I was at a
loss when on my own. (Conf Sub 6)
6.42
For many who held regular employment the effects of
their childhood background was forever present.
I escaped into my nursing career. There I was a social
cripple I avoided social events as much as possible. I had few if any life
skills. My self esteem was low, I felt less than, inadequate, I could hardly
look at people let alone communicate, I felt that people would find out how
inept I was. I had a great fear of judgements and criticism. I had a fear of
public places and couldn't for example go into a bank or a library. I felt
comfortable with the sick however the sicker and more vulnerable they were the
more comfortable I was. I have worked in oncology for many years, hidden away on
night duty. I was so vulnerable myself and felt a connection with their
vulnerability. I would do anything for them and felt my worth only when they
thanked me for whatever I did, not for being me. (Sub 192)
Homelessness and other housing problems
6.43
Housing is a major concern for many care leavers whose
lives have been a continual financial struggle. Many have been forced to live
in public housing, subsidised rental accommodation or living on the street.
After I left the Homes, I used to drink alcohol in order to
forget the Homes I was in. I was trying to block out the pain I was in. During
these years I lived in boarding houses, with just a small room, I lived on my
own. Today I live in a flat with the Brotherhood of St Laurence at Fitzroy. I
have been there 2 years and this is the first home I have had. I don't have to
share the toilet or the kitchen with anyone. (Sub 283)
In today’s climate, the cost of housing is enormous. What I call
normal people out there - people that can have relationships, people that can
build futures-in two-income families are finding it a struggle. But for someone
like me and my family-and, I am sure, for many other people that have been
through the system-the impact of what that system did totally cancels out that
avenue for us. I am afraid that there are people-and I am sure there are a lot
of other people my age and older who are coming into the later parts of their
lives-who are still no closer to having that real home they have never had.[294]
6.44
The National Inquiry into Homeless Children (the
Burdekin Inquiry) found that the 'period of time spent in a child welfare or
juvenile justice institution, or otherwise detached by the welfare system from
the natural family, seems to increase significantly a child's chances of
becoming homeless'. In addition the Inquiry heard that many of the young
prostitutes working the streets were or had been state wards. The lack of
alternative after-care support following deinstitutionalisation was according
to evidence presented to the Inquiry 'directly and substantially contributing
to youth homelessness'.[295] The
evidence to this Committee 15 years after Burdekin told very similar stories to
those reported by Burdekin.
6.45
VANISH also referred to some Victorian research which
'highlighted that a significant number of homeless youth (street people) had
been "in care" and were living at risk on the streets of Melbourne.
They were cushioning their pain by using drugs, risk taking behaviour and
suffered depression and suicide'.[296]
Educational attainment
6.46
For many care leavers, the lack of education has been a
profound regret and a source of much bitterness. As noted in chapter 4, the
causes of poor educational attainment were many. However, for whatever the
reason, many care leavers left the institutions with a serious lack of literacy
and numeracy skills - which have remained with them throughout life. As noted
above this has had a profound affect on many in their ability to obtain and
maintain employment.
...in Neerkol the nuns bashed, thrashed and humiliated me.
They repeatedly told me they 'couldn't bash brains' into me...then from 13 I was
sent out to work...Because of this I still can't read or write today, I have to
have my partner do all my reading, writing or filling out of forms for me Even
signing my name is difficult because of the bashings I received to my left hand
by the nuns to try and force me to write with my right hand...This lack of
education has caused me extreme difficulty over the years and has denied me the
opportunity to gain most jobs (Sub 217)
Like many of us older wards of the state, we now find
ourselves in a position where many have adult literacy problems, where many of
us cannot spell or add up, and some cannot read. (Sub 8)
I was never taught to spell properly. I have always been
embarrassed in the fact I am not a good reader and a terrible speller...[my wife]
always writes the letters and fills out any forms for me. (Sub 198)
6.47
The Committee heard stories from care leavers who have
moved through life by covering, disguising or working around their literacy
problems.
I got my [driving] licence by memory and by trying to remember
things.
Senator KNOWLES - Can you read road signs?
No, not all. Some I do...I go by memory. If somebody tells me a
street, I never forget it and I know that is the street I have to go down.[297]
I have failed at education. I cannot spell. I get my wife to do
it. If you give me a big word, I will find 50 words to get around it. I have
explained that to you. I found that hard. That is why we have always tried
self-employment, so that I do not get embarrassed. I have always kept it quiet.[298]
I am a very strong businessman. I have been very successful in
business. I am illiterate. I cannot read or write. That is a handicap. I work
around that. I have good people, over 40 people, who work for me. I bury what
has happened.[299]
6.48
Remedial and other mature education services are
utilised by some care leavers, though there remains a great need. However, for
many care leavers accessing mature age education can be a daunting experience,
especially for those who do not have a family network to provide support and
assistance. Issues about education services are discussed in chapter 10. The
positive benefits flowing from undertaking mature age education were described
in a number of submissions.
I am now 43 years old and I have been a mature age student
for seven years. The teachers do not regard me as being retarded. I am actively
involved in class discussions, which is welcomed by the teachers. This has
greatly helped me to adjust and recover from my experiences at Vaughan House
and with help from a number of friends I have been able to adjust and live a
normal life in society. (Sub 273)
Adult anti-social or criminal activity
6.49
In addition to submissions which provided anecdotal
evidence of people being unable to adjust to living 'outside' and resorting to criminal
activity, the Committee received a number of first-hand accounts.
In the 'outside world' I found myself completely at a loss.
I was unable to behave socially and responsibly, because the rules were different
but nobody had told me what they were. Before long I was in trouble with the
law and, as predicted by the staff at Westbrook, found myself doing time in
adult prisons...I feel that I am entitled to blame the so-called 'care givers'
who, by their own actions, had shaped the innocent boy into the troubled young
man who was dumped without preparation into a society that was very different
to anything he had ever known. (Westbrook - Sub 141)
After that it was institutions right through my life,
including three jail sentences before I had even reached 21...Even being in
Pentridge at the age of seventeen was bad but no where near as bad as
Bayswater. (Sub 148)
I have now tried to come to terms with my life but still
have trouble doing so. I constantly end up having instances where I suffer from
flashbacks...I just can't get any real treatment in prison. (Sub 105)
6.50
One woman described leaving Parramatta
at 18 and within 6-8 weeks being in Long Bay Jail on a 2-year break, enter and
steal sentence. Within weeks of release she had travelled to Victoria,
re-offended, and been sentenced to 3 years in Fairlea Prison. She commented
that:
From the ages 13-23 I had spent only 10 months on the
outside. Basically I was still 13-15 years old mentally and emotionally. I had
not grown up at all. So with no life skills, no money and no hope I left
Fairlea and reentered society. (Sub 304, p.4)
Prostitution
I would rather be a prostitute than be locked up at Parramatta
Girls Home.
6.51
It was indicated in evidence that many people who become
drug-addicted and/or sex industry workers are survivors of child abuse and
neglect. The Historical Abuse Network also stated 'a lot of our people have
ended up in the sex industry because they had no other choices. They had no
people skills, no life skills, no education - nothing.'[300]
With a limited education, my chances of securing employment were
low. The employment agency advised me to go back to school, despite me
explaining I needed to earn an income, in order to support myself financially.
I was told to go back to school anyway, and treated with contempt, as though I
had a choice in the matter. Unable to find work, I quickly became desperate. I
soon resorted to child street prostitution to supplement my meagre supermarket
income. (Conf Sub 24)
I became promiscuous and money was an issue. So men had to pay
for my company. After all, that dirt never seemed to wash off! (Conf Sub 146)
...it was the effects of what was created after that too that kept
building upon what had been put there with abuse that kept me entrenched in
acting out and going form one addiction to another Drugs, Alcohol and
substances and then turn myself to prostitution until my body could not stand
the treatment I was holding onto and all the emotion I was carrying as a direct
result of those days in my childhood. (Sub 386)
Their background is why, in large part, these care leavers
value themselves so little as to consider such highly exploitative, and
psychologically damaging, 'work' acceptable. Others, who are vulnerable, engage
in sex work as a matter of economical survival i.e. educationally
disadvantaged, homeless young people. Understanding of these issues is seen as beyond
the grasp of 'ordinary Australians', who have led less marginalized lives.
6.52
One care leaver commented that community education is
required to raise awareness, and combat community prejudice against sex
workers, and those who are drug addicted, in order to assist survivors of these
experiences out of the prostitution and drug addiction cycles. Access to
education, housing, and employment, is essential for all former protective care
clients, if they are ever to make a successful transition from being in care to
the next stage of the lifespan. Those who have a history of drug addiction and
prostitution are especially needy in this regard; in recognition of the uphill
battle they face in terms of community prejudice, in their efforts toward
re-integration into mainstream society on all levels.[301]
I pretty much glided through life for the next few years
drinking heavily with no support. I went from job to job, house to house and at
times living on the streets. At 17 I turned to heroin. I so had to numb the
pain. I couldn't afford my habit and didn't have the courage to do crime so I
turned to prostitution. Please keep in mind I'm 17 still a State Ward and still
supposedly under the care of DOC'S...I am now 37 years old and have suffered Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder, Borderline Personality Disorder, Adjustment
Disorder, Panic Attacks and Depression. I have tried many times from the age of
15 to commit suicide and by the grace of God I am still here today. Because of
my drug use I now have Hep C and suffer very bad Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. I
will be on medication for a long time and will be in counselling for a long
time too. I am unable to work and I have no schooling. I accept my role in all
this but feel very strongly that not only did my parent's fail me but DOC'S did
too. (Sub 332)
Cost to individuals, families and society
Legislation and government policies, themselves born of
public sentiment, empowered those whose judgements about the best interests of
the children and the worthiness of the parents and family setting, were more
often a product of the social climate than any insightful analysis of the
potential costs and benefits to be derived from removing children from their
families and placing them in alternative care.[302]
6.53
The cost to many individuals, families and society of
the impact of time spent in institutional care is profound. As described above,
the harm done to children while in care has resulted in harmed adults. As
adults, care leavers face relationship problems; drug and alcohol abuse; loss
of educational and work opportunities; long-term physical and mental health
problems; and antisocial and criminal behaviour. This is a significant cost to
the individual and a massive long-term social and economic cost for society
which may be compounded when badly harmed adults in turn create another
generation of harmed children.
Quantifying costs
6.54
The enormous direct social and economic costs of
children who have lived in care include: medical care for injuries; medical
care for long term effects; mental health care; substance abuse treatment;
costs through the criminal justice system; costs of intervention services such
as counselling; and social services costs for case workers and shelters.
6.55
The direct and indirect social and economic costs of
the impact on children who have lived in care have not been quantified.
However, some evidence is available which demonstrates the enormity of the impact.
For example, Mr John
Murray of the Positive Justice Centre provided
an indication of the extent of care leaver involvement in welfare related
fields:
...this institutional abuse does not stop when we age out of
the system. Once in contact with the juvenile justice system we have a 90 per
cent chance of becoming adult criminals. We have a one in three chance of
leaving care at 16 as women or girls pregnant or already with a child. We have
a one in two chance of being homeless within that first year. Only one in 100
of us will get to university, but one in three of us will have attempted
suicide. We are also highly likely to wind up addicted to drugs, engaged in
prostitution, unemployed, mentally ill or incapable of sustaining loving relationships.[303]
6.56
In 2003 the Kids First Foundation published a study
into the cost of child abuse and neglect in Australia,
focussing on the more common characterisations of physical, sexual and
emotional abuse and neglect as this terminology is used by the literature and
by child protection services. The study characterised the costs under the
headings: human cost of those abused, long-term human and social costs, cost of
public intervention and cost of community contributions. Long-term human and
social costs included mental disability, increased medical service usage,
chronic health problems, lost productivity, juvenile delinquency, adult
criminality, homelessness, substance abuse and intergenerational transmission
of abuse. Public sector intervention involved child protection services
including abuse prevention programs, assessment and treatment of abused
children, law enforcement and victim support.
6.57
The study estimated the annual cost of child abuse and
neglect to the Australian community to be $4.92 billion. The long-term human
cost and the cost of public intervention accounted for around three quarters of
the total cost, with the long-term human and social cost estimated at $1.94
billion per annum.[304]
6.58
The South Australian Department of Human Services
estimated the cost of child abuse and neglect in 1995-96 to be $354 million in
that small state with a population of just over 1.5 million. That figure is
more than the $318 million South Australia
earned in the same period from wine exports, or the $239 million from the
export of wool and sheepskins.[305]
6.59
Care leavers also access health services for
counselling, drug and alcohol services, mental health services and in some
cases medical services as a result of the effects of physical or sexual abuse.
CBERSS outlined research on the use of health care services:
-
An American study on health care utilisation in
2000 by women found that women who had experienced childhood sexual abuse
incurred an average of $150 more in primary care charges over a two-year
period, and visited primary health care clinics 1.33 times more often than
women who had not been sexually abused. Another American study found that women
who had been sexually abused as children had significantly higher primary
health care costs and more frequent emergency department visits than women
without child sexual abuse histories. Both research projects concluded that
their findings represented a gross underestimation of the real financial
consequences associated with child sexual abuse.
-
These findings are consistent with earlier
research, which concluded that women who had been sexually abused as children
were 2.5 times more likely to seek medical attention and to be hospitalised.
-
Research by Moeller and Bachman in 1993 indicated
that childhood abuse had adverse consequences for physical health. The greater
the incidence of abuse the woman experienced as a child, the greater the
likelihood of adult hospitalisations for both illnesses and surgeries.[306]
6.60
Other research indicates that women who were sexually
abused as children are refusing to have pap smear tests[307] while it is
estimated that half of the women undergoing drug treatment are victims of
childhood sexual assault.[308]
6.61
Other costs to society occur because of the high
numbers of care leavers who enter the justice system. It was stated in evidence
that one in five adult prisoners and one in three juvenile prisoners have been
in care.[309] Sixty-five
per cent of women in Victorian prisons were themselves housed in institutions
as children. The cycle is perpetuated as many children of women prisoners are
made wards of the state while their mothers are imprisoned - 70 per cent of
women in Victorian prisons are mothers and largely the sole-carer.[310] A study of
risk factors for the juvenile justice system found that '91 per cent of the
juveniles who had been subject to a care and protection order, as well as a
supervised justice order, had progressed to the adult corrections system with
67 per cent having served at least one term of imprisonment'.[311]
6.62
Those who have been physically or sexually assaulted
are also over represented in the prison population with 80 to 85 per cent of
women in Australian prisons having been the victims of incest or other forms of
abuse.[312]
Another Australian study of 27 correctional centres in New
South Wales found that 65 per cent of male and female
prisoners were victims of child sexual and physical assault.[313]
6.63
Although there has been a large volume of research work
undertaken on the cost of child abuse, there is a paucity of specific research
which provides an overall estimate of the actual cost to society resulting from
the negative outcomes of institutional care. The following provides an overview
of some of the research on the cost of child abuse:
-
It was estimated that the cost in future lost
productivity of severely abused children was between US$658 million and US$1.3
billion annually, based on the assumption that the children’s impairments
caused by the abuse would limit their potential earnings by just 5 to 10 per cent
(United States General Accounting Office, 1992).[314]
-
A study by the Michigan Children’s Trust Fund
compared the costs of an early intervention program which started prenatally
and worked intensively with parents for the first year of a child’s life, with
the costs incurred when a child is abused. The study showed that, offering
early intervention to every family in the state was approximately one-twentieth
of the costs associated with abuse.[315]
-
The United Kingdom National Commission of
Inquiry into the Prevention of Child Abuse (1996) estimated that the cost of
child protection services and additional mental health and correctional
services associated with child abuse and neglect was over 1 billion pounds per
year in England and Wales. (Briggs 1995).[316]
-
Layton cites an American study conducted in 2001
where a conservative estimate concluded US$94 billion was spent annually in
response to child abuse, of which approximately 75% was spent on treating all
the long term, indirect effects, including special education, mental and
physical health care, juvenile justice, lost productivity and adult
criminality. (2003)[317]
6.64
The indirect costs to society of the harm done to
children in care are as large, if not larger, than the direct costs but also
unquantified: What has been the cost to the economy of care leavers not
fulfilling their potential? What is the cost to the economy of lost
productivity? What is the cost of human suffering of the child or of the
family? These costs represent a loss to the economy and to society generally. The
NSW Commissioner for Children and Young People stated:
Clearly any costs for an individual victim and their family
represents an 'opportunity lost' cost for the community. People who may have
been more productive in their lives and in their contribution to the community
may not contribute as they would have, because their life's energy is devoted
to wrestling with the legacy of their abuse.[318]
Benefits of providing services
6.65
An aspect of cost saving is argued in the longer term
by taking a preventative approach in the present. For example, if counselling and
other support services are not provided early for people abused in orphanages
and homes, it will cost governments significantly more in the longer term in the
way of future treatment in psychiatric institutions, drug and alcohol rehabilitation
centres, prisons and other institutions - for this is where many of these
untreated people end up.
The days of low self-esteem, of painful memories and
nightmares are decreasing. The happy times are beginning to outweigh the sad.
The experiences I had in 'care' are forever imprinted in my mind, on my body
and in my heart. But I want to finish by saying some things to those who abused
me. You did not win!!! You never
touched the real me. You didn't even know the real me. You never knew that I
was a strong and beautiful human being. You
did not crush my spirit and one day
you WILL have to face your maker and answer for what you did to me and to too
many other precious and beautiful children.[319]