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Violent crimes against parents by children up 60% since 2015, shows London data

about 18 hours ago
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The number of violent offences involving an adolescent attacking their parents or step-parents has increased by more than 60% in the past decade, according to figures recorded by the UK’s biggest police force.Data released by Scotland Yard reveals that there were 1,886 such offences recorded in 2015 but this increased to 3,091 in the first 10 months of 2025 alone.The offences involved a suspect aged between 10, the age of criminal responsibility in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, and 17 who had been recorded as being the child or stepchild of the alleged victim.The Metropolitan police figures suggest a major surge in recorded incidents amid the Covid pandemic, although the numbers had been edging up over the previous four years and have seemingly plateaued in the past two years.There were 1,886 offences recorded in 2015, 1,804 in 2016, 2,068 in 2017, 2,290 in 2018 and 2,292 in 2019.

In 2020, when Covid hit the UK, there were 2,454 recorded incidents of filial violence.This was followed by 2,395 in 2021, 2,792 in 2022, 3,052 in 2023, 3,030 in 2024 and 3,091 between 1 January 2025 and 31 October of that year.Jane Griffiths, the chief executive at Capa First Response, a charity that works with families where there is child-to-parent aggression, suggested the figures reflected the national picture, with her organisation seeing a 90% increase in referrals in the past two years compared with the previous norm.Griffiths said part of the explanation could be an increase in awareness of available help but that a number of other factors could be fuelling the violence.She said: “I spoke to a woman recently with a fractured jaw and a fractured finger from her daughter and she said that, you know, this has been going on for a long time, and it’s only when things are starting to escalate that I’m thinking, actually, maybe there’s more of a problem.

“We did an internal data grab and we found spikes of parents referring to us, and those spikes were at six years old, eight years old and then 12 years old.So people are recognising it earlier and trying to say: ‘Right, OK, hold on, this is more than just childhood stuff.’”Griffiths said an increase in child poverty in the UK and a perceived failure of parents to live up to expectations could be factors behind the increase in recorded violence.She said: “More and more families are struggling to meet expectations, maybe of children and what peers are getting.“People are finding it really hard and struggling.

When you struggle externally, you struggle within the systems of your family, relationships start to suffer.”A study by academics at the universities of Oxford and Manchester in 2020 examined the impact of the Covid pandemic on filial abuse.One parent whose testimony was included in the study said her son “beat me so badly that if the police did not come when they did, I would not be alive”.Explanations for an apparent surge in violence varied from the change in structures and routines to the pressures brought about by home schooling and the loss of external help during lockdowns.Helen Bonnick, the author of Child to Parent Violence and Abuse: A Practitioner’s Guide to Working with Families, said she hoped the new figures were a sign that the stigma about reporting such abuse was fading.

She said: “Some will argue that changes in society and stresses, eg pandemic, led to an increase, but it is difficult to state categorically because of all the other things that happened to provide context.“Since 2010 the increase in knowledge and understanding has been massive – 15 years ago hardly any one was talking about it publicly and we had no sense of data.”Bonnick said there had been “research across the world but [there had been’] a very big focus in Britain” and that a new “understanding of trauma and neurodiversity, for instance, has altered the way we understand what is happening in families”.She added: “[An] increase in bespoke services available means more people encouraged to reach out for help.Less shame attached perhaps?“Cuts to services such as adolescent mental health and children’s services [also] led to a drop in early help and support which might have helped keep things safer for some families.

”Child-to-parent violence is considered by experts in the field to be the most hidden and stigmatised form of family violence, with the recorded numbers likely to only hint at the true scale of the problem,Studies suggest that abuse towards parents can begin from an early age but typically peaks between the ages of 14 and 16,There is a lack of firm research on its prevalence although such filial violence is internationally regarded as a growing problem,A storyline about this issue featured in EastEnders in 2024 as the character Kat Slater struggled with the increasingly violent behaviour of her teenage son Tommy,A report published in 2021 by the domestic abuse commissioner highlighted studies in the US, Canada, UK and Spain that indicated more serious physical violence towards parents was “likely to sit somewhere between 3% and 5% [of families] with multidimensional definitions including patterned physical and psychological aggression sitting around 10%”.

Violence cited ranged from punching, kicking, pulling hair, pushing, throwing or pinning, trapping, biting, throwing or hitting with objects to strangling, using weapons such as knives, the use of poison/gas, and burning/scalding,
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Violent crimes against parents by children up 60% since 2015, shows London data

The number of violent offences involving an adolescent attacking their parents or step-parents has increased by more than 60% in the past decade, according to figures recorded by the UK’s biggest police force.Data released by Scotland Yard reveals that there were 1,886 such offences recorded in 2015 but this increased to 3,091 in the first 10 months of 2025 alone.The offences involved a suspect aged between 10, the age of criminal responsibility in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, and 17 who had been recorded as being the child or stepchild of the alleged victim.The Metropolitan police figures suggest a major surge in recorded incidents amid the Covid pandemic, although the numbers had been edging up over the previous four years and have seemingly plateaued in the past two years.There were 1,886 offences recorded in 2015, 1,804 in 2016, 2,068 in 2017, 2,290 in 2018 and 2,292 in 2019

about 18 hours ago
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Huge rise in number of people in England’s A&Es for coughs or hiccups

Millions of people are turning to A&E departments in England for minor ailments including coughs, blocked noses and hiccups, according to data that health leaders say lays bare a failure to give patients prompt access to primary care.Emergency wards are designed for serious injuries and life-threatening emergencies only. But many are becoming swamped with patients whose health concerns should be dealt with elsewhere, including a near tenfold increase in people seeking help for a cough.A&E attendances for hiccups, dizziness and a myriad of other minor conditions have also soared. The trend of patients heading to emergency departments with non-emergency symptoms is underlined by the fact that doctors found nothing wrong with more than 2 million A&E patients in 2024-25

about 20 hours ago
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Judge me on what I do, says new EHRC chair after transgender groups’ criticism

The new chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission has asked campaigners who raised doubts about her appointment to “judge me on what I do”.In one of her first media interviews since her appointment at the start of December, Dr Mary-Ann Stephenson pledged to “uphold the rights of everybody across all protected characteristics”, after the UK government overruled the objections of parliament’s women and equalities committee about her suitability for the job.Stephenson argued that open letters she had signed opposing censorship on campus and violence against campaigners had been “really widely mischaracterised as kind of anti-trans letters”.Instead, she said, they were in line with her “lifelong commitment to protecting and upholding human rights, including the right to freedom of expression and freedom of association and basic democratic rights”.Stephenson donated to the 2022 campaign of the barrister Allison Bailey, who was found to have been unlawfully discriminated against by her chambers for her gender-critical views

1 day ago
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‘Absolutely frightening’: surge in ketamine cases hits urology wards in England and Wales

Experts have warned that urology departments across England and Wales could be close to breaking point as ketamine-related hospital admissions have “skyrocketed” in the past few years.Ketamine, a class B dissociative drug used for pain relief and sedation, is increasingly used recreationally in England and Wales. It is one of only three drugs, alongside magic mushrooms and hallucinogens, to have become used more regularly since 2015.Recent data from the Office for National Statistics shows that ketamine usage, while down slightly from the previous year, is still high. The numbers who say they have used the drug in the past month has increased by 251

1 day ago
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Offenders in England and Wales to have alcohol levels tracked over new year period

Thousands of offenders in England and Wales will have their alcohol levels tracked over the new year festive period by electronic tags that monitor the wearer’s sweat.The tags, which are now worn by 5,000 people who have been released from prison or who are serving a community sentence, are designed to keep criminals sober over the festive season and drive down drink-fuelled reoffending.The deputy prime minister and secretary of state for justice, David Lammy, said: “Alcohol-driven crime causes real harm to victims and communities, and piles extra pressure on our emergency services. Tackling it head-on is vital to make our streets safer.“These tags act as a physical and constant reminder to offenders that there’s no room for slip-ups – one drink and they could find themselves back in court or even behind bars

1 day ago
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Two new subtypes of MS found in ‘exciting’ breakthrough

Scientists have discovered two new subtypes of multiple sclerosis with the aid of artificial intelligence, paving the way for personalised treatments and better outcomes for patients.Millions of people have the disease globally – but treatments are mostly selected on the basis of symptoms, and may not be effective because they don’t target the underlying biology of the patient.Now, scientists have detected two new biological strands of MS using AI, a simple blood test and MRI scans. Experts said the “exciting” breakthrough could revolutionise treatment of the disease worldwide.In research involving 600 patients, led by University College London (UCL) and Queen Square Analytics, researchers looked at blood levels of a special protein called serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL)

2 days ago
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Harry Randall and buoyant Bristol keen to carry form into new year

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Damien Martyn, former Australian Test cricketer, in induced coma with meningitis

about 16 hours ago
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From Matildas magic to Winter Olympic wonders: Australia’s sporting highlights for 2026

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The Spin | The men’s Test cricket team of the year: from Travis Head to Jasprit Bumrah

about 20 hours ago
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Life after LeBron James: who will inherit the NBA’s future?

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Spin bowling on the back foot with pace dominating quickfire Ashes

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