A Primer in Preventing Child Abuse Study Number: 15This fact sheet initiates new public service from Prevent Child
Abuse America that has been made possible through a grant from the Sigma Delta
Tau Sorority. Fact sheets will be issued periodically on a variety of subjects
as needs arise. Fact sheets may be reproduced without notice to NCPCA; however,
we request that the author, if any, and Prevent Child Abuse America be credited
as the source if reproduced in part or in whole in other publications or products.
Prevent Child Abuse America is committed to preventing child abuse before it
occurs. Since child maltreatment is a complex problem with a multitude of causes,
an approach to prevention must respond to a range of needs. Therefore, Prevent
Child Abuse America has designed a comprehensive strategy comprised of a variety
of community-based programs to prevent child abuse. Reflective of the phases
of the family life cycle, this approach provides parents and children with the
education and support necessary for healthy family functioning. Based on what
is known or believed to enhance an individual's ability to function within the
family unit, several program areas contributing to the strategy can be identified.
Beginning with the prenatal period, these programs offer a continuum of educational,
supportive and therapeutic services for parents and children enduring throughout
the school years. Although a community may not choose to offer services in all
program areas, as a group they respond to the needs of all family members.
The Prevention Programs
Support programs for new parents
The purpose of support programs for new parents, such as perinatal
support programs, is to prepare individuals for the job of parenting. Such
programs should include supports during both the pre- and postnatal periods
to ease the difficulties associated with having a new infant at home. Prenatal
and postnatal medical care is clearly important, particularly since low
birth weight babies, drug exposed babies and babies otherwise sick in infancy
are at risk for being abused. Many prospective parents now participate
in prenatal care programs that go beyond the medical needs of the pregnant
mother and the growing fetus to include attention to the demands of parenting.
Prenatal programs can build on existing medical programs and educate about-to-be
parents in child development, parent-child relationships, and adult relationships.
Currently, home visitation is the most innovative and holistic prevention
program used in approaching the difficulties of educating and supporting
the at-risk family, while at the same time making a wide range of community
and professional services available to the family. This strategy is a comprehensive
program in which services vary widely in both scope and content. An array
of services may be offered, including nurse visitation to monitor the health
of an infant and mother, in-home parenting education, and the intervention
of a social worker for the purpose of preventing the placement of an infant
in foster care. Most importantly, home visitation programs strive to create
social networks for new parents by connecting them with other center-,
community-, and hospital-based prevention programs. This helps break down
the social isolation experienced by many new parents, especially those
in poverty stricken communities. Social isolation is a proven risk factor
for child abuse.
Education for parents
Since 1989, the family support movement has pointed to an increasing
need among all American families for support, advice, and role models.
Consequently, many parent education and support programs have encouraged
the participation of all families, without regard to specified risk. By
targeting all families, rather than low-income or otherwise at-risk groups,
parent aducation and family support programs have achieved the broad-based
backing necessary to underwrite statewide programs.
Nationally known programs that target at-risk families such as Parent
Effectiveness Training (P.E.T.), the Parent Nurturing Program, and Systematic
Training for Effective Parenting (S.T.E.P.) have various approaches toward
parenting education and are distinct in their use of such teaching tools
as reward and punishment, praise, and specific encouragement. Such parent
focused interventions with well-specified training components aimed at
improving child rearing competence and stress management have been supported
by empirical findings as effective measures for reducing risk factors associated
with physical child abuse.
Many groups that provide parenting education, such as natural childbirth
groups, community-based prevention programs, and mental health services
also can provide social support systems for families either at risk for
or in treatment for abuse. Mutual support, or self-help groups also provide
a network of support to members in adjusting to new roles, problems, or
changes in family circumstances. These groups can help members expand their
social contacts, improve their feelings of self-esteem, and increase their
knowledge of child development.
Early and regular child and family screening and treatment
Because abusive behavior is often cyclic, many health and developmental
problems in early childhood can lead to behavioral, educational, and psycho-emotional
problems in later adolescence and adulthood, which could lead to the recurrence
of abusive behavior. Also, many abused children at first appear acquiescent,
cooperative, shy, affectionate, and "normal," but this apparent serenity
may mask multiple psychological problems. For this reason, detecting and
treating health and developmental problems early in life is important.
Early childhood screening and treatment programs should be seen as a continuaton
of the preschool screening services, such as those offered by a home visitor.
The purpose of such programs should be to detect problems children may
be having, including abuse and neglect, and to ensure that these children
receive the necessary health, mental health, and other services that will
best protect them from becoming abusive parents, while at the same time
remaining sensitive to the possibility that a child may be inappropriately
labeled, with long-term negative consequences.
Child care opportunities
The purpose of child care or day care programs is to furnish parents
with regular or occasional out-of-home care for their children. While child
care is a necessity in households in which all adults are employed, such
services also are beneficial for parents who do not work outside the home
but who find continuous child care responsibilities very stressful. Child
care programs also provide opportunities for children to learn basic social
skills. Head Start programs in particular provide a rich mix of child care
and child development services.
Programs for abused children
It has been argued that prevention of abuse is in part tied to providing
therapeutic treatment to children or young people who have been abused
or neglected. To minimize the long-term effects of abuse, age-appropriate
treatment services should be available to all maltreated children.
Treatment programs for abused children include therapeutic day school
programs as well as day hospital programs, residential programs, and home
and clinic setting treatment. These programs most often concentrate on
improving the cognitive and developmental skills of younger children and
psychodynamic treatment for children in older age groups.
Life skills training for children and young adults
The purposes of life skills training are first to equip children, adolescents,
and young adults with interpersonal skills and knowledge that are valuable
in adulthood, especially in the parenting role; and second, to provide
children with skills to help them protect themselves from abuse. Knowledge
and skills can be imparted in a variety of ways; irrespective of the specific
techniques, educational classes or supports would be provided through the
school systems and through adult education centers.
Skill and knowledge building should be stressed in the areas of child
development, family and life management, self-development, self-actualization,
and methods of seeking help. For adolescents in particular, education in
sexuality, pregnancy prevention, and issues related to parenting should
be provided.
Family support services
Lacking a support network in times of crisis puts families at significantly
greater risk for abuse or neglect. To provide immediate assistance to parents
in times of stress, crisis care programs should be available on a 24-hour
basis and should include the following services: telephone hot line, crisis
caretakers, crisis baby-sitters, crisis nurseries, and crisis counseling.
Through these programs, parents facing immediate problems could receive
immediate support to alleviate the stresses of a particular situation.
Help should be available over the phone or through in-person counseling.
The program also should offer parents the options of having someone
come into their homes on a temporary basis to assist with child and home
care or of taking the child to a crisis nursery. Because crisis care is
temporary and short-term, such programs should be equipped to refer parents
to long-term services as needed.
Public information and education
While hospitals, schools, and community agencies have a critical role
to play in implementing this child abuse prevention strategy, they cannot
fully shoulder the responsibility. Educational campaigns are necessary
to make the public aware of the seriousness of the problem and its implications
as well how individuals can make a difference. The effectiveness of the
preceding prevention strategy will only be realized when there is a fully
aware public, committed to preventing child abuse.
Adapted from: Cohn Donnelly, A. An Approach to Preventing Child
Abuse. Chicago, IL: Prevent Child Abuse America.
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