Journal List > BMJ > v.320(7248); Jun 3, 2000
BMJ. 2000 June 3; 320(7248): 1538. PMCID: PMC1118118
Copyright © 2000, British Medical Journal
Child discipline
Weak evidence for a smacking ban
Robert E Larzelere, psychologist
Psychology Department, Munroe-Meyer Institute, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE 68198-5450,
USA Email: rlarzelere@unmc.edu
EDITOR—A ban of a medical intervention would never be supported on the basis of such
meagre evidence as used by Waterston to support a ban of the parental intervention of
smacking.
1
“Significant adverse effects” and a failure to “learn the desired behaviour” were
based on a literature review that is unpublished
2
and that includes studies that included
severe types of corporal punishment such as “beating with a stick,” “still hurt the next day,”
“burning,” and “using a knife or gun.” Most studies that were reviewed were cross sectional,
which cannot disentangle the causal direction between smacking and child misbehaviour.
2
In the only published review (in 1996) of child outcomes of non-abusive or customary
physical punishment, only eight studies could disentangle the causal effects of smacking.
3
All eight studies, including four randomised clinical trials, found that nonabusive smacking
benefited children when it backed up milder disciplinary tactics with children aged 2 to 6
years.
Smacking, then, makes milder tactics more effective, not “harder to use” as concluded by
Waterston.
1
Another study was cited to conclude that Swedish “public opinion on the need for physical
punishment changed dramatically after a public education campaign” following the 1979
smacking ban.
4
The so called dramatic change was artificially created because survey
questions from before 1982 and from 1994 were compared. The 1994 survey question that
was most similar to the previous question showed an increased endorsement of mild or
moderate physical punishment as sometimes necessary—from 26% in both 1978 and 1981
to 34% in 1994.
5
The 1994 Swedish survey also found that corporal punishment of
teenagers was as prevalent after the 1979 ban as in previous generations and that, overall,
the incidence of corporal punishment had decreased little.
5
Child discipline http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1118118/?too...
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