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TDVAM- "You Deserve Respect"

TDVAM- "You Deserve Respect"
January 30, 2025

This February, the Center Against Sexual and Family Violence (CASFV) is proud to support Teen Dating Violence Awareness Month (TDVAM) under the empowering theme: You Deserve Respect. Every young person deserves relationships built on trust, equality, and respect. Unfortunately, too many teens face unhealthy or abusive relationships. This month, we’re uniting to raise awareness and provide education to foster healthy, respectful connections.

Dating abuse statistics:

  • Nearly 1.5 million high school students nationwide experience physical abuse from a dating partner in a single year.
  • One in three girls in the US is a victim of physical, emotional, or verbal abuse from a dating partner, a figure that far exceeds rates of other types of youth violence.
  • One in ten high school students has been purposefully hit, slapped, or physically hurt by a boyfriend or girlfriend.

Why awareness is so important:

  • Only 33% of teens in an abusive relationship ever told anyone about the abuse.
  • 81% of parents believe teen dating violence is not an issue or admit they don’t know if it’s an issue.
  • Though 82% of parents feel confident that they could recognize the signs if their child were experiencing dating abuse, most parents (58%) could not correctly identify all the warning signs of abuse.

Empourment Project- Chalk About Love at the El Paso Public Libraries

Chalk About Love Calendar

Sources:

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “Physical Dating Violence Among High School Students—United States,2003,” Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, May 19, 2006, Vol. 55, No. 19.
  2. Davis, Antoinette, MPH. 2008. Interpersonal and Physical Dating Violence among Teens. The National Council on Crimeand Delinquency Focus. Available at http://www.nccd-crc.org/nccd/pubs/2008_focus_teen_dating_violence.pdf.
  3. Grunbaum JA, Kann L, Kinchen S, et al. 2004. Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance—United States, 2003. Morbidity andMortality Weekly Report. 53(SS02); 1-96. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/ss5302a1.htm.
  4. Liz Claiborne Inc., conducted by Teenage Research Unlimited, (February 2005).
  5. “Women’s Health,” June/July 2004, Family Violence Prevention Fund and Advocates for Youth, http://www.med.umich.edu/whp/newsletters/summer04/p03-dating.html.
  6. Fifth & Pacific Companies, Inc. (Liz Claiborne, Inc.), Conducted by Teen Research Unlimited, (May 2009). “Troubled Economy Linked to High Levels of Teen Dating Violence.
  7. https://www.loveisrespect.org/

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