Very High Levels of Violent Discipline Among Children in Afghanistan: Prevalence, Determinants, and Socioeconomic Disparities
Sayed Ataullah Saeedzai, Jess Ghannam, Ali Mirzazadeh

TL;DR
A study in Afghanistan finds that most children face violent discipline, with higher rates in poorer and less educated households, highlighting the need for urgent action to protect children.
Contribution
This study provides new insights into the high prevalence and socioeconomic disparities of violent discipline among children in Afghanistan.
Findings
81.2% of Afghan children experience physical punishment, with higher rates in Pashto-speaking households and homes with younger heads.
Severe punishment affects 58.5% of children, particularly in rural areas and among Pashto-speaking families.
Maternal education and economic status significantly reduce rates of physical punishment.
Abstract
Violent discipline affects millions of children globally, often justified as essential to child-rearing. This study examines the prevalence and determinants of any physical punishment, severe physical punishment, and psychological aggression towards children among Afghan caregivers. We analyzed data from the Afghanistan Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) 2022–23, which included 23,568 households across all 34 provinces. Information on violent discipline was gathered for children aged 1–14 years. Analyses were adjusted for complex survey design, with Poisson regression assessing predictors of aggression towards children by caregivers, such as language, education, economic status, and child disabilities. Findings revealed that 81.2% of Afghan children faced physical punishment, with higher rates in Pashto-speaking households (85.1%) and homes with younger heads (82.5%). Severe…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMigration, Health and Trauma · Child Abuse and Trauma · Homelessness and Social Issues
