Kentucky Can Do Better - Stopping Child Abuse Deaths
Kentucky Can Do Better - Stopping Child Abuse Deaths
Nov 2nd, 09
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Too often, the simple joys of a child’s life in central
Occurrences of child abuse and neglect in
In 1909, President Theodore Roosevelt held the first White House summit on children. Though 100 Octobers have come since then, we still have far to go to ensure the health, safety and well-being of our nation’s kids. The rate of child abuse and neglect deaths in the
Tragically, thousands of children die each year in the
Where is the outrage about the senseless deaths of our youngest citizens? What are we doing to stop it?
While child abuse and neglect deaths total about five a day in the
Across the nation, we need to do more to support child protection workers – the first line of defense in protecting children in high-risk situations. Their hands are often tied, because they lack the resources, support and training they need to successfully do their job. Caseloads in some jurisdictions are as high as 60 or more, even though national standards recommend 12 or fewer cases per worker to ensure that at-risk children receive the attention they need.
We know a great deal about preventing abuse and neglect and stopping related fatalities. When provided with services and appropriate supervision, the vast majority of potentially abusive parents can learn to safely care for their children. And many abused children who get help are resilient enough to overcome their history. But for many, the outcome is predictable: when childhood goes wrong, adulthood goes wrong, and the sad story of abuse, including death, repeats itself from one generation of troubled families to the next.
While it’s too late to help the children already killed, we can honor their memories by vowing to protect every child in danger. We can overcome inadequate funding and wide variations in capacity among states, by enacting federal policy committed to protecting children no matter where they live.
Child abuse and neglect are national concerns that deserve national solutions. Through the introduction of the We Can Do Better campaign, groups are coming together to raise awareness and press our nation’s lawmakers to develop and fund solutions that will save children’s lives. Among them are providing more support for the stressed families in which abuse and neglect are more likely to occur, modifying current confidentiality laws to allow greater public understanding every time a child dies, standardizing the way states define abuse and neglect, and providing the funding needed to adequately support child protection services.
To protect
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Prevent Child Abuse
For information about this report, log on to www.everychildmatters.org.

