• Overview • Reporting Suspected Abuse • Physical Indicators • Behavioral Indications • How many children are abused in the U.S. each year? • How many children are abused in the Antelope Valley? • What are the different types of child abuse? • What is child neglect? • What is physical abuse? • What is sexual abuse? • What is emotional abuse? • Who is more likely to to be abused? • What makes people abuse children? • What help is available? What can I do? No
one wants to believe that a child would be intentionally
harmed
physically, sexually or emotionally hurt, yet it happens
every day.
You can protect your children, the children you
care
for, the children you teach, the children you come
in contact with
on a regular basis... all children, by being educated and aware that
child abuse does exist.
We
should be suspicious of abuse when children tell us they are
being abused. We should become suspicious when we see "patterns" of the physical or behavioral indictors identified
in this brochure. We should also be aware that isolated incidents or one behavioral
indicator alone may not be abuse and could be a reaction to
problems other than
child abuse such as death in the family, divorce or other severely disruptive
forces in the child's life.
"Reasonable suspicion" is
all that is required to contact authorities and file a
report. If unsure about a situation, call
the Child Abuse Hotline
(1-800-540-4000) and ask to discuss your concerns with a trained professional.
They can help you decide whether to make a report or not. If a situation
arises where you are not comfortable confronting the parent/caregiver
and fear that
you will put the child or yourself in danger do not intervene directly. Call the authorities
immediately. You may call the Child Abuse Hotline or inform authorities at
the Antelope Valley Sheriffs Station in Lancaster at 661-948-8466 or in Palmdale
at 661-267-4300. If you have an immediate fear for the life of a child, call
911. Your call to report child abuse can initiate protective action for a
vulnerable child. You can open the door to services that
would otherwise be unavailable
to the child and family. It can be the action that makes a critical difference
in the life of that child.
• Unexplained
bruises, welts, burns, fractures.
• Consistent hunger, poor hygiene, inappropriate dress
• Unattended physical problems or medical needs
• Unexplained difficulty in walking or sitting
• Torn, stained or bloody underclothing
• Pain, swelling or itching in genital area
• Bruises, bleeding or lacerations in external genitalia, vaginal or anal
areas
• Vaginal/penile discharge
• Sexually transmitted disease, especially in pre-teens
• Lags in physical development; speech disorders
• Failure to thrive
• Shallow, empty facial features
• Hyperactive/disruptive behavior
• Child reports
that he/she is being abused/neglected
• Indiscriminately seeks affection
• Poor self concept; overly compliant
• Consistent irritability, stomach ache, vomiting
• Beg or steals food
• Constant fatigue, listlessness or falling asleep in class
• Abuses alcohol or drugs
• Age inappropriate sexual behavior or knowledge
• Poor peer relationships
• Marked change in behavior; change in performance in school
• Depression
• Sudden sleeping/eating disturbances
• Compulsive masturbation or rubbing of the genital area
• Fear of a particular person or particular place
• Delinquent behavior; runaway behavior
• Thoughts of suicide
• Destructive behavior
• Sleep Disorders; inhibited play, unusual fearfulness
• Lags in mental or emotional development
We don't
know how many children are abused In the United States
each year. Child abuse continues to be a silent crime. Significant
numbers of child abuse
cases do not get reported and numbers generated about abuse victims relate "reports" of
abuse. Additionally, data collection systems across the country collect data
in different ways using different definitions of abuse. The most recent national
data released by the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data Systems indicate
that child protective service agencies received and referred for Investigation
an estimated 3 million children in one year.
In 1996, between
600 - 700 children per month from the Antelope Valley reported allegations of abuse and were reported
to the Los Angeles County
Department of Children and Family Services. In
1995, about 1,000 Antelope Valley Children
were referred to the Sheriff's Department for abuse investigations, constituting
approximately 28% of the child abuse referrals in the entire Los Angeles
Sheriff's Department.
There are four major types of child abuse:
child neglect, physical abuse,
sexual abuse and emotional abuse. Child neglect is the
type most frequently reported accounting for 60% of child
abuse reports. Physical abuse constitutes
about 25% of child abuse reports, sexual abuse about 15% and emotional
abuse about 5% of child abuse reports. The balance of reports
consist of concerns
about medical neglect, abandonment, and other situations threatening the
well being of a child.
Physical neglect
is the failure to protect the child from harm or danger, failure to provide for the child's basic needs, including
adequate shelter
and food; inattention to the children's emotional needs, failure to provide
medical care, and failure to meet the educational needs of the child. Consequences
of neglect may include learning problems, low self-esteem, significant developmental
delays, activity delays, academic and behavior problems.
Physical abuse is any act which results
in non-accidental physical injury to a child. Accidental
injuries are differentiated
from abusive injuries by
assessing the location of the injury, assessing statements by the child about
how the injury occurred, noting unusual injuries for a specific
age group, noting
unexplained injuries for which the history is inconsistent, and questioning a
delay in seeking care for the injured child. Behavioral indicators
may also support
concerns about the presence of physical abuse. Injuries include damage to
the skin and surface tissue, damage to the brain, damage
to other internal organs,
and damage to the skeleton. Injuries may result from punching, kicking, belting,
biting, burning or otherwise causing physical harm to the child.
Child sexual abuse is generally defined
as sexual activities involving a child and an adult or significantly
older child. It is difficult for most people
to talk about sexual abuse and even more difficult for society as a whole
to
admit that children of all ages and both sexes are sexually abused every
day. Sexual abuse includes both touching and non-touching
offenses. In its extreme
form it includes sexual intercourse and oral/genital sex. It also includes
indecent exposure, and exposing a child to pornographic material. Physical
offenses include fondling, making a child touch an adult's sexual
organs, or any penetration of a child's vagina or anus, no matter how slight,
by any object that does not have a valid medical purpose. Children are often
sexually abused in their own homes by their parents or caretakers who should
be nurturing and protecting them. Children are also sexually abused by persons
outside the home who gain access to them and assert control over them.
Emotional abuse is psychological maltreatment
which is defined as "acts
that damage immediately or ultimately, the behavioral, cognitive, affective
or physical functioning of a child." Harmful behaviors may include constant
rejection of a child, terrorizing, failure to provide the physical or mental
stimulation that a child needs to grow, exposure to domestic violence or
corrupting influences such as drug abuse and criminal activity.
Both males and females from birth to 18
years of age are at risk of child abuse. Child abuse occurs
in all
racial, ethnic, cultural and socioeconomic
groups. Some reports suggest that girls are at greater risk of sexual abuse.
However, recent research suggests that the sexual abuse of boys is dramatically
under reported. Suggestions are that as data collection systems become more
sophisticated, we will see that boys are equally at risk of sexual abuse.
Physical abuse and neglect appears to be correlated with
poverty and families on the lower socioeconomic
rungs. This correlation seems to be, however, a response to deficiencies
in the reporting systems rather than a reflection of the actual incidence
of abuse.
There
is no simple answer. The reasons are many. We must keep
in mind that the types of abuse range from mild to severe
and
that the abusers may also
range from a generally loving but over-stressed parent who abuses infrequently or only once to the severely disturbed parent who engages in the chronic
ongoing sadistic torture of a child. Obviously, new parenting skills and
support may help the one parent but not the other. STRESS
is the number one contributor
to abuse. Other factors include the immaturity of parents, lack of parenting
skills, unrealistic expectations about children's behavior and capabilities,
a parent's own negative childhood experiences, social isolation, frequent
family crises, and drug or alcohol problems.
For a help in an
emergency or life threatening situation, call 9-1-1 and secure
police assistance for the child. For a non-emergency
situation, call the Child
Abuse Hotline (1-800-540-4000) at DCFS to make a child abuse report. The Los
Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS), the local
child protective services agency, has the legal authority to "explore,
study and evaluate" the facts surrounding a reported case of abuse or
neglect. A Children's Social Worker will be sent to investigate the situation.
Attempt will be made to make the home a safe place for the child. Sometimes,
a child is placed in foster care or with relatives until the immediate danger
has passed and support services can be provided to the family. Even after removal,
every attempt is made to return the children as quickly as possible to their
own family. The number of children actually removed from their homes is relatively
small - about 15% of those referred to DCFS.
For families where the risk of
child abuse is high or where physical abuse has occurred, child abuse prevention
and treatment services are available through the Children's Bureau of Southern
California (800-272-0438).
Treatment services
for sexually and physically abused children are available
at the Children's Center of the Antelope Valley (661-949-1206).
Intensive In-Home services are available to families where abuse has occurred
through the
Antelope Valley Family Preservation Network which can be accessed by the
Children's
Social Worker assigned to a family. Other services which families may need
can be identified through the Red Book Directory (800-949-1069)
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