http://austinpublishinggroup.com/pediatrics/
The public is unaware of the fact that child abuse and neglect result in 22% of
state and 50% of county expenditures. In economic terms, parents who raise
children who become productive citizens contribute $1.4 million to our economy
for each child they raise. In contrast, parents who neglect and/or abuse their
children cost our economy $2.8 million for each child they damage. They feed
the Cradle to Prison/Welfare Dependency Pipeline so well described by the
Children’s Defense Fund. Underlying this tragedy in human and
economic terms is the hidden prejudice of juvenile ageism which regards newborn
babies as the personal property of their biological parents to do with as they
wish until they come to public attention as seriously damaged from abuse and/or
neglect.
The
physical and mental health repercussions of child abuse and neglect warrant
dealing with them as public health issues that warrant primary, secondary and
tertiary prevention interventions. Primary prevention would prevent the
formation of struggling families. Secondary prevention would assist struggling
families. Tertiary prevention would reduce the extent of harm to the affected
children through Child in Need of Protective Services Interventions. Wisconsin Cares, Inc., a family advocacy
organization, has proposed that the primary prevention of child abuse and
neglect be implemented by setting a simple standard for the legal and physical
custody of a newborn baby, namely that the parent cannot be under the custody
of another person, as is the case with minors and developmentally disabled
adults. In those instances, the custodian of the parent would have custody of
the newborn baby if willing and able to assume it by fulfilling the criteria
for Kinship Care until the biological parent no longer required a custodian.
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