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CHILD MALTREATMENT FATALITY RISK FACTORS
Child Fatality Risk Factors Report
The rate at which children are dying at the hands of family members in this country is shameful and so unbelievable sad. The BBC just did a special about it here: BBC Special Report [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-15288865].
So I thought I would share a guide I developed. This isn’t a pleasant topic, I know, but it is an important one.
Below are some risk factors associated with higher rates of child deaths from abuse or neglect. These were drawn from a survey of literature regarding child maltreatment fatalities. The link above is to the report itself, which you should read. The points below summarizes some of the information the report contains. All credit goes to the Academy for Professional Excellence who put out the report. Who knows, blogging this might raise someone’s red flag some day and lead to a timely report for a child at risk, or encourage a struggling parent to ask for help.
If any parents out there are worried about themselves and their children, and see these attributes as fitting their own circumstances, please seek the support and assistance you need right away. There are a lot of good folks and organizations who are ready to help. See the list of resources below.
(Note to others: Please don’t report a family based only on the fact they have some of these attributes. That would be wrong and maybe even harmful. Reports, generally speaking, should be bases on a reasonable suspicion that a caregiver’s actions or inactions have, or could have significantly harmed a child.)
RISK FACTORS:
Child Attributes:
– There is a new born infant in the home
– A child is under three-years-old (children 3 and under account for over 75% of all fatalities.)
– A child has medical, behavioral, or developmental problems
– A child is ill or handicapped
– A child was born premature
– An infant has colic
– A child is hostile, aggressive or excessively fussy
– A child has disturbed or unusual behaviors
– A child has a recent history of vomiting, reoccurring medical concerns or multiple hospitalizations
Family Attributes:
– There are two or more children under 3 years old
– Family lacks suitable child care availability
– Family is financially poor
– Children have different biological fathers
– Unrelated adults are living in the home
– Family has a history of severe or repeated instances of maltreatment
– There are multiple father figures in and out of the home
– The family has frequent moves
Caregiver Attributes:
– Lives near or below the poverty line
– Has a low education level (no high school diploma0
– Has poor stress coping abilities
– Has a history of abuse as a child
– Has had his/her parental rights terminated in the past
– Is a victim or perpetrator of domestic violence
– Has a history of violence or criminality
– Has a problem with substance abuse
– Has a deficit of skills related to parenting (including ineffective or inconsistent discipline)
– Has unrealistic expectations about children’s behavior and capabilities
– Lacks emotional attachment to the child
– Has mental health problems (e.g. depression)
– Is socially isolated, without a healthy support system
– Is a teenage mother, particularly for the second or subsequent child
– Is a mother who never pursued prenatal care
Click to access SACHS-Child%20Fatalities%20Literature%20Review-Feb%202010.pdf
IN NEW JERSEY: http://www.state.nj.us/dcf/index.shtml
NATIONAL RESOURCES:
Childhelp USA®
National Child Abuse Hotline
1-800-4-A-CHILD
24 Hours a Day
Child Abuse National Hotline
1-800-252-2873, 1-800-25ABUSE
National Youth Crisis Hotline
National Youth Development
1-800-HIT-HOME (1-800-448-4663)
National Runaway Switchboard
This hot-line is a referral service for youths in personal crisis.
1-800-621-4000
State-by-State Listings:
| State | Organization | Phone |
| Alabama | Dept. of Human Resources | 334 242-9500 |
| Alaska | 24-hr hotline: | 800 478-4444 |
| Arizona | Phoenix hotline: | 800 541-5781 |
| Arkansas | Dept. of Human Services | 800 482-5964 |
| California | Dept. of Social Services Office of Child Protective Services | 916 445-2771 |
| Colorado | DenverCounty: 24 hr. hotline | 303 727-3000 |
| Connecticut | Reporting 24 hrs: | 800 842-2599 |
| Delaware | Reporting 24 hrs in-state: | 800 292-9582 |
| District of Columbia | Report child abuse
Report child neglect |
202 576-6762
202 727-0995 |
| Florida | Abuse Registry | 800 962-2873 |
| Georgia | Dept. of Human Resources Child Protective and Placement Services Unit: | 404 657-3408 |
| Hawaii | Dept. of Human Services 24hr hotline: | 808 832-5300 |
| Idaho | For information and referral to regional office: | 208 334-0808 |
| Illinois | In-State Parents under stress and Reporting 24 hrs: | 800 252-2873 |
| Indiana | Reporting: | 800 562-2407 |
| Iowa | In-state hotline: | 800 362-2178 |
| Kansas | Reporting 24 hr hotline: | 800 922-5330 |
| Kentucky | Local Dept. for Social Services or statewide hotline: | 800 752-6200 |
| Louisiana | 24 hr hotline: | 504 925-4571 |
| Maine | Reporting 24 hrs: | 800 452-1999 |
| Maryland | County office of Dept. of Human Resources: Child Protective Services. | Click here for Phone Listings |
| Massachusetts | 24 hr hotline: | 800 792-5200 |
| Michigan | 24 hr. hotline: | 800 942-4357 |
| Minnesota | County office of Dept. of Social Services. | Click here for Phone Listings |
| Mississippi | 24 hr hotline: | 800 222-8000 |
| Missouri | Reporting: | 800 392-3738 |
| Montana | 24 hr. hotline: | 800 332-6100 |
| Nebraska | Reporting 24 hrs: | 800 471-5128 |
| Nevada | 24 hr. hotline: | 800 992-5757 |
| New York | Reporting 24 hrs: | 800 342-3720 |
| New Mexico | 24 hr. hotline: | 800 432-2075 |
| New Jersey | 24 hr. hotline: | 877 652-2873 |
| New Hampshire | In-state hotline: | 800 894-5533 |
| North Dakota | Reporting: CountySocial Services or: | 701 328-4806 |
| North Carolina | 24 hr. hotline: | 800 662-7030 |
| Ohio | Dept. of Human Services Child Protective | 614 466-0995 |
| Oklahoma | 24 hr. hotline: | 800 522-3511 |
| Oregon | Dept. of Human Resources Childrens’ Services Division | 503 945-5651 |
| Pennsylvania | 24 hr. hotline in-state: | 800 932-0313 |
| Puerto Rico | 24 hr. hotline: | 800 981-8333 |
| Rhode Island | 24 hr. hotline: | 800 742-4453 |
| South Carolina | Dept. of Social Services Division of Child Protective and Preventive Services | 803 734-5670 |
| South Dakota | Child Protective Services | 605 773-3227 |
| Tennessee | Dept. of Human Services Child Protective Services | 615 313-4746 |
| Texas | 24 hr. hotline: | 800 252-5400 |
| Utah | 24 hr. hotline: | 800 678-9399 |
| Vermont | Dept. of Social and Rehabilitation Services | 802 241-2131 |
| Virginia | 24 hr. in state hotline: | 800 552-7096 |
| Washington | 24 hr. hotline: | 800 562-5624 |
| West Virginia | 24 hr. hotline: | 800 352-6513 |
| Wisconsin | Dept. of Health and Social Services | 608 266-3036 |
| Wyoming | In-State Reporting: | 307 777-7922 |
Child Abuse Introduction | Signs of Child Abuse
Child Abuse Statistics | It’s Under Reported
Effects of Child Abuse on Children: Abuse General
Effects of Child Abuse on Children: Child Sexual Abuse
Injuries to Children: Physical and Sexual Abuse
Effects of Child Abuse on Adults: Childhood Abuse
Effects of Child Abuse on Adults: Childhood Sexual Abuse
Definition of Physical Abuse | Signs of Physical Abuse
Definition of Sexual Abuse | Signs of Sexual Abuse
Definition of Child Neglect | Signs of Child Neglect
Definition of Emotional Abuse | Signs of Emotional Abuse
Child Physical Abuse and Corporal Punishment
Nationwide Crisis Line and Hotline Directory
Some US Census Data on Poverty in America
POVERTY IN THE UNITED STATES – Highlights
• The official poverty rate in 2010 was 15.1 percent—up from 14.3 percent in 2009. This was the third consecutive annual increase in the poverty rate. Since 2007, the poverty rate has increased by 2.6 percentage points, from 12.5 percent to 15.1 percent
• In 2010, 46.2 million people were in poverty, up from 43.6 million in 2009—the fourth consecutive annual increase in the number of people in poverty
• Between 2009 and 2010, the poverty rate increased for non-Hispanic Whites (from 9.4 percent to 9.9 percent), for Blacks (from 25.8 percent to 27.4 percent), and for Hispanics (from 25.3 percent to 26.6 percent). For Asians, the 2010 poverty rate (12.1 percent) was not statistically different from the 2009 poverty rate.
• The poverty rate in 2010 (15.1 percent) was the highest poverty rate since 1993 but was 7.3 percentage points lower than the poverty rate in 1959, the first year for which poverty estimates are available
• The number of people in poverty in 2010 (46.2 million) is the largest number in the 52 years for which poverty estimates have been published.
• Between 2009 and 2010, the poverty rate increased for children under age 18 (from 20.7 percent to 22.0 percent) and people aged 18 to 64 (from 12.9 percent to 13.7 percent), but was not statistically different for people aged 65 and older (9.0 percent).
What? Your in the middle class? How does this relate to you?
INCOME IN THE UNITED STATES – Highlights
• Real median household income was $49,445 in 2010, a 2.3 percent decline from 2009.
• Since 2007, the year before the most recent recession, real median household income has declined 6.4 percent and is 7.1 percent below the median household income peak that occurred in.
• Both family and non-family households had declines in real median income between 2009 and 2010. The income of family households declined by 1.2 percent to $61,544; the income of non-family households declined by 3.9 percent to $29,730.
Take the Labor Quiz
How much to you know about economic changes in America’s labor force over the last 30 years? Apart from the occasional new article on Labor Day, few of us give much thought to the extraordinary sacrifices that were required of prior generations in order to bring us the level of comfort and dignity so many of us enjoy today. But the blessing our grand parents and great grand parents fought so hard to bring us are beginning to disappear. America, once the leader in raising up the middle class, has fallen behind many other advanced nations.
An article entitled “The Speedup” in the July-August, 2011 edition of Mother Jones, written by Monika Bauerlein and Clara Jeffery, takes a look at this issue. I created a pop quiz based on some of the facts in the article. Take the quiz to see how well you are doing as an American worker. There are only 7 questions, so it won’t take long. The answers are below. If you score very high you should take the afternoon off, maybe.
1. What does the USA have in common with Papua New Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Samoa and Swaziland?
a. We all celebrate the Fourth of July
b. Like us, baseball is their national pass-time.
c. We are the only six nations on earth that don’t have mandatory paid maternity leave.
2. In the last 30 years, American worker productivity (which can be measured as the amount of work we accomplish per hour) has:
a. Declined by 75%
b. Increased by 140%
c. Increased by over 240%
3. Increased productivity means more company profits since the labor costs per item is lower. So, given your answer to question number 2 above, in the past 30 years the average overall wages in the US has:
a. Decreased by 20%
b. Increased by over 50%
c. Increased by only 16%
4. Over this same 30 year period, the average income of the top 1% of Americans:
a. Increased by 20%
b. Increased by 40%
c. Increased by over 80%
5. The number of hours everyone works in a given week is something that impacts our family life, and the nations GDP. Germany has the highest GDP in Europe. So how many more hours per year (actual time on the job) do American’s work compared to German workers?
a. We work 80 hours, or almost two weeks more per year.
b. We work 198 hours, or almost five weeks more per year.
c. We work 378 hours, or almost 10 weeks more per year.
6. In this current recession the GDP of every nation initially plunged, but no nation was hit harder than Japan. Japan’s GDP dropped twice as much as did ours. So when it comes to jobs lost, which nation has the worst unemployment rate?
a. Canada
b. Japan
c. USA
7. One last question. In 1950 nearly 35% of all wage or salary earners in America were in a union. What percentage of this group were union members as of last year?:
a. About 25%
b. Almost 20%
c. Less than 15%
If you answered each of the above question with option C you are well informed. Congratulations!
If you didn’t answer C to any of the questions, you really should read the article in Mother Jones.
In fact, we all need to be better informed so we can come together to restore a measure of economic justice in America. Here are a few additional details regarding each of the quiz questions:
1. Not only is the US only one of 6 countries that don’t have paid maternity leave, we are one of 16 nations that don’t require our workers to have time off each week. We are one of only 9 nations that don’t require businesses to offer a paid annual leave. Every one of our competitor nations provide this for their citizens.
2. While productivity has soared in the last 30 years by over 240%, the real value increase in the minimum wage since 1990 went up by just 21%. The increase in the cost of living rose 67% since 1990. Our output of goods and services in most sectors of the economy far outstrips the employment that most of these sectors create.
3. While income for the wealthiest 1% of American’s rapidly rises every year, the wealth owned by the rest of us actually declined slightly during the Regan years until about 1997. The increase since then is anemic compared to the enormous amount of wealth created by our great American labor force.
4. The rise in income among the wealthy, as large as it is, pales in compared to their rise in wealth. The top 20% of the wealthiest Americans today own almost 85% of everything leaving just 15% of the remaining wealth for the rest of us to share.
5. Not only do American’s rack up more time on the clock than our competitor nations (almost 10 weeks per year more than Germany) this doesn’t include the time we work off the clock. For example, half of us check emails on weekends and 46% of us even check work emails on days we are home sick.
6. Japan was hit twice as hard by the recession in terms of their drop in gross domestic product (GDP), yet our employment rate dropped more than twice their rate. Canada’s decline in GDP and employment initially mirrored our own (not quite as bad) but today their employment rate is higher than it was before the recession while we are worse off than all our competitor nations. Mean while, many American corporations are reporting record high profits.
7. The declining trend in union membership in America is in lock step with the decline of the middle class. The poor have faired even worse. Union workers today make about $10,000 more per year than non-union workers, yet the working public would rather trash unions than join one. The tensions between private sector employees and public sector workers is largely the result of envy by private sector workers who lost higher wages and many of their benefits when they lost their union.
How do you think we are doing as Americans? Most Labor Day articles remind us of the social battles and sacrifices prior generations have faced to bring a little dignity into our lives. We are doomed to repeat the mistakes of history if we don’t learn from them. I hope this quiz highlights where America may be headed and prompts you to consider what it will take to save the middle class. This is the real purpose for celebrating Labor, especially on Labor Day.
Note: First published in 2011, little has changed for the better since.
TV Ads May Soon Target You Personally
DATA DRIVEN VIEWPOINT: How, as good citizens, can we ever expect to broaden our views and embrace our differences when everything we read, see on TV or hear in broadcasts are increasingly tailored to our current preferences?
“But these targeted ads are just commercial pitches for products we might want”, you say?
Maybe, but what we consume, what we produce and what we prefer not only derive from culture, it also drives culture changes. The things we buy and the person we become have a transactional relationship, each influencing the other. So our purchases influence our attitudes and world outlook even as our attitudes and outlook influence what we want to buy. Allowing broadcast media to so personally influence our buying habits likely has unseen consequences.
Coming in 2013 – targeted TV ads
BY Robert Andrews
Nov 30, 2012 – 7:07AM
http://paidcontent.org/2012/11/30/coming-in-2013-targeted-tv-ads/
TV advertising remains healthy, but platform operators want a bigger slice of the pie. Next year, some will introduce targeted advertising to their set top boxes, promising greater granularity and more effectiveness to marketers.Just like with static display ads online, we have become used to seeing targeted video ads on the web, mobiles and tablets.
Now video ad targeting will come to the living room, when the UK’s two big pay-TV operators will soon start showing targeted ads to viewers in 2013. [SNIP]
The products
Leading provider BSkyB will trial-launch an NDS Dynamic-powered service to seven million set top boxes under the AdSmart banner by the summer, allowing advertisers to target 90 different demographic attributes. According to Sky
[SNIP] Read more at the above URL address