24/7 Child Abuse Report Hotline:
419-774-4100

Help us celebrate National Child Abuse Prevention Month

March 22, 2010

Richland County Children Services believes prevention is the best hope for reducing child abuse and neglect and improving the lives of children and families. That's why we take the lead role each year to mark April as National Child Abuse Prevention Month.

Strengthening families and preventing child abuse requires a shared commitment of individuals and organizations in every community. We believe our county is blessed with thousands of caring people and a strong network of agencies and groups aimed at protecting children and helping families.

If you have questions about this monthlong celebration, please contact us at 419-774-4100.

What Is Prevention and Why Is It Important?

 With respect to human services, prevention typically consists of methods or activities that seek to reduce or deter specific or predictable problems, protect the current state of well-being, or promote desired outcomes or behaviors.


The term "prevention" is typically used to represent activities that stop an action or behavior. It can also be used to represent activities that promote a positive action or behavior. Research has found successful child abuse interventions must both reduce risk factors and promote protective factors to ensure the well-being of children and families.

Protective factors are conditions in families and communities that, when present, increase the health and well-being of children and families.

They are attributes that serve as buffers, helping parents who might otherwise be at risk of abusing their children to find resources, supports, or coping strategies that allow them to parent effectively, even under stress.

The impact of child maltreatment can be profound. Research shows that child maltreatment is associated with adverse health and mental health outcomes in children and families, and those negative effects can last a lifetime.

In addition to the impact on the child, child abuse and neglect affect various systems — including physical and mental heath, law enforcement, judicial and public social services, and nonprofit agencies as they respond to the incident and support the victims.

One analysis of the immediate and long-term economic impact of child abuse and neglect suggests that child maltreatment costs the nation as much as $258 million each day, or approximately $94 billion each year.

Framework for Prevention of Child Maltreatment

 


Professionals working to prevent child abuse and neglect have borrowed from other disciplines, including public health, education, and mental health, to influence and guide practice. However, public health has had the greatest influence in organizing a framework of prevention services.

That framework consists of three levels of services: primary prevention programs, directed at the general population (universal); secondary prevention programs, targeted to individuals or families in which maltreatment is more likely (high risk); and tertiary prevention programs, targeted toward families in which abuse has already occurred (indicated).

Distinctions among primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention do not necessarily reflect the way prevention-related services are actually organized and provided. Rather than sorting prevention initiatives into mutually exclusive categories, prevention is increasingly recognized as occurring along a continuum.

A comprehensive system of care for improving outcomes for children and families needs to include strategies that coordinate resources across the entire continuum, from primary to secondary to tertiary prevention.

Primary prevention

Primary prevention activities are directed at the general population and attempt to stop maltreatment before it occurs. All members of the community have access to and may benefit from these services. Primary prevention activities with a universal focus seek to raise the awareness of the general public, service providers, and decision-makers about the scope and problems associated with child maltreatment. Universal approaches to primary prevention might include:


-- Public service announcements that encourage positive parenting.


-- Parent education programs and support groups that focus on child development, age-appropriate expectations, and the roles and responsibilities of parenting.

-- Family support and family strengthening programs that enhance the ability of families to access existing services, and resources to support positive interactions among family members.

-- Public awareness campaigns that provide information on how and where to report suspected child abuse and neglect.

Secondary prevention

Secondary prevention activities with a high-risk focus are offered to populations that have one or more risk factors associated with child maltreatment, such as poverty, parental substance abuse, young parental age, parental mental health concerns, and parental or child disabilities.

Programs may target services for communities or neighborhoods that have a high incidence of any or all of these risk factors. Approaches to prevention programs that focus on high-risk populations might include:

-- Parent education programs located in high schools, focusing on teen parents, or those within substance abuse treatment programs for mothers and families with young children.

-- Parent support groups that help parents deal with their everyday stresses and meet the challenges and responsibilities of parenting.

-- Home visiting programs that provide support and assistance to expecting and new mothers in their homes.

-- Respite care for families that have children with special needs.

-- Family resource centers that offer information and referral services to families living in low-income neighborhoods.


Tertiary prevention


Tertiary prevention activities focus on families where maltreatment has already occurred (indicated) and seek to reduce the negative consequences of the maltreatment and to prevent its recurrence. These prevention programs may include services such as:


-- Intensive family preservation services with trained mental health counselors that are available to families 24 hours per day for a short period of time (e.g., 6 to 8 weeks).


-- Parent mentor programs with stable, nonabusive families acting as "role models" and providing support to families in crisis.

-- Parent support groups that help parents transform negative practices and beliefs into positive parenting behaviors and attitudes.


-- Mental health services for children and families affected by maltreatment to improve family communication and functioning.


Ecological framework for prevention

 An ecological framework for prevention is based on the following assumptions:

-- Children and families exist as part of an ecological system. This means that prevention strategies must target interventions at multiple levels: the individual, the family, the community, and society.

-- Primary responsibility for the development and well-being of children lies within the family, and all segments of society must support families as they raise their children.

-- Assuring the well-being of all families is the cornerstone of a healthy society and requires universal access to support programs and services.

 

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