Sentences with phrase «between child maltreatment»

In Study 2, emotional reactivity and maladaptive responses to distress mediated the association between child maltreatment and both internalizing and externalizing psychopathology.
Context Evidence for an association between child maltreatment and later psychopathology heavily relies on retrospective reports of maltreatment.
Examining the relationship between child maltreatment and severity of attachment difficulties among children five years of age and older.
We believe this demonstrates that the methodological issue of the prevalence of maltreatment in the comparison group, while not easily solved, is a key contributor to the apparently weaker associations between child maltreatment and mental disorders observed in prospective studies relative to those observed in retrospective studies.
Examining the relationship between child maltreatment and school performance in public schools in Saudi Arabia: A pilot study.
Effects of early stress on brain structure and function: Implications for understanding the relationship between child maltreatment and depression
Emotion Dysregulation Mediates the Relationship Between Child Maltreatment and Non-Suicidal Self - Injury.
Egeland and Sroufe1 pointed out the dramatically negative impact of neglecting or abusive maternal behavior for attachment and personality development, for which they accumulated unique prospective evidence in later phases of the Minnesota study.2 What do we know about the association between child maltreatment and attachment, what are the mechanisms linking maltreatment with attachment insecurity and disorganization, and what type of attachment - based interventions might be most effective?
The interaction between child maltreatment, adult stressful life events and the 5 - HTTLPR in major depression.
Specific chapters address: the general or common court system; the powers of the court and the rights of parents and children in child maltreatment cases; the interplay between child maltreatment legislation and caseworker practice; the juvenile court process; the criminal court process; domestic relations issues relevant to court proceedings.
Addressing the Relationship Between Child Maltreatment and Juvenile Delinquency Children's Bureau, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Children's Bureau Express, 5 (3), 2004 Presents evidence on the connection between child maltreatment and juvenile delinquency.
Issues addressed include the overlap between child maltreatment and domestic violence, modifying child protective practice with families experiencing domestic violence, enhancing caseworker safety and support in complex child protection cases, and building collaborative responses for families experiencing domestic violence.
The purpose of this paper is to provide a synopsis of the recent published research from 2006 to 2010 on the association between child maltreatment and Axis I mental disorders and suicidal ideation and attempts.
Juvenile Justice Division Child Welfare League of America Underlines the connection between child maltreatment and juvenile delinquency and supports the implementation of innovative programs and practices through systems integration, collaboration, and reform.
TITLE: The relationship between child maltreatment and axis I mental disorders: A summary of the published literature from 2006 to 2010
Underlines the connection between child maltreatment and juvenile delinquency and supports the implementation of innovative programs and practices through systems integration, collaboration, and reform.
Specific chapters address: the general or common court system; the powers of the court and the rights of parents and children in child maltreatment cases; the interplay between child maltreatment legislation and caseworker practice; the juvenile court process; the criminal court process; domestic relations and other court proceedings; the issues involved in going to court, including the rules of evidence, court reports, and testifying; the relationship between caseworkers and the court; and court improvement and best practices.
The relationship between child maltreatment and axis I mental disorders: A summary of the published literature from 2006 to 2010
Child Welfare League of America Juvenile Justice Division Works to increase awareness of the connection between child maltreatment and juvenile delinquency and the need for an integrated approach to programs and services across the child welfare and juvenile justice systems.
Introduction to Chemical Dependence (PDF - 578 KB) New York State Center for Development of Human Services, Research Foundation of State University of New York, & Buffalo State College (2010) Explores the relationship between child maltreatment and substance abuse and explains chemical dependency.
Explores the relationship between child maltreatment and substance abuse and explains chemical dependency.

Not exact matches

Finally, they concluded that the association between maltreatment and antisocial behavior is conditional, depending on a child's MAOA genotype.
... Differences in anxious attachments were also noted between those children who primarily experienced abuse and those who experienced neglect or marginal maltreatment.
This report presents findings from a unique partnership between the University of Michigan and the State that allowed us to match the universe of child maltreatment records in Michigan with educational data on all public school children in the state.
Here we report findings from a unique partnership between the University of Michigan and the State that allowed us to match the universe of child maltreatment records in Michigan with educational data on all public school children in the state.
Between the ages of 4 and 17, 10 percent of the students experienced child maltreatment in the form of abuse and neglect, while more than 17 percent of non-CPC participants were victims.
The work of the Coalition focuses on the link between animal abuse, elder abuse, domestic abuse and child maltreatment.
Where the latter is a broad survey of the law governing decision making for children and the relationship between parents and the state that arises in that context, this seminar focuses in on the three areas of the law that tend to generate the most cultural and legal controversy: education, religion, and maltreatment.
Dr. Joanne Klevens of the Division of Violence Prevention within the Center for Disease Control's National Center for Injury Prevention and Control and colleagues looked for associations between the Earned Income Tax Credits (EITC) and reductions in child maltreatment.
Dr. Klevens and her colleagues measured child maltreatment using inpatient admissions data for abusive head trauma in children under age two between 1995 and 2013.
Mandated by the Adoption and Safe Families Act, this report to the United States Congress by the Department of Health and Human Services provides an overview of the relationship between substance abuse and child maltreatment and the effectiveness of services designed to meet the needs of child welfare clients affected by addiction.
Closer partnerships between child welfare agencies and schools, hospitals, and other common sources of reports could facilitate more accurate and equitable identification of cases of maltreatment at the point of reporting.
For example, numerous studies on child maltreatment find strong associations between child neglect and poverty (Sedlack & Broadhurst, 1996; Eckenrode et al., 1998).
Findings from the NSCAW indicate that substance abuse was much more highly associated with «neglect, failure to provide basic necessities» than with «neglect, failure to supervise» or any type of abuse.11 Finally, violence may be more likely to erupt in homes where stimulant drugs and alcohol are used.12 The interplay between substance abuse and child maltreatment within family dynamics and across children's developmental periods is gradually becoming clearer.
These findings approximate those of the more recent National Survey of Child and Adolescent Well - Being (NSCAW) that 20 percent of children in an investigation for abuse and neglect had a mother who, by either the child welfare worker's or mother's account, was involved with drugs or alcohol; that figure rises to 42 percent for children who are placed into foster care.7 These studies have clearly established a positive relationship between a caregiver's substance abuse and child maltreatment among children in out - of - home care and among children in the general populaChild and Adolescent Well - Being (NSCAW) that 20 percent of children in an investigation for abuse and neglect had a mother who, by either the child welfare worker's or mother's account, was involved with drugs or alcohol; that figure rises to 42 percent for children who are placed into foster care.7 These studies have clearly established a positive relationship between a caregiver's substance abuse and child maltreatment among children in out - of - home care and among children in the general populachild welfare worker's or mother's account, was involved with drugs or alcohol; that figure rises to 42 percent for children who are placed into foster care.7 These studies have clearly established a positive relationship between a caregiver's substance abuse and child maltreatment among children in out - of - home care and among children in the general populachild maltreatment among children in out - of - home care and among children in the general population.
Value assumptions / Value systems / Values and practice / Values behind theories / Verbal maltreatment / «Victims and Villains» / Victim in the dock / View from 1996 / Views from Inside / Views of troubled youth / Violence and touch deprivation (1) / Violence and touch deprivation (2) / Violence between young people / Violence in children's narration / Virginia Axline / Vision for 2034 / Visit from Dr. Korczak / Visiting / Volunteers
Third, we focused our analyses on childhood socioeconomic disadvantage, maltreatment, and social isolation because previous research suggested a link between these measures and age - related disease.24, 31,33 However, children may be exposed to other significant adverse experiences, and research is needed to uncover them.
Indeed, Jay Belsky incorporated all of these risk factors into his process model of parenting, 11 and data from multiple studies support links to child well - being.12 In an experiment on the effectiveness of a program for low - birth - weight infants, Lawrence Berger and Jeanne Brooks - Gunn examined the relative effect of both socioeconomic status and parenting on child abuse and neglect (as measured by ratings of health providers who saw children in the treatment and control groups six times over the first three years of life, not by review of administrative data) and found that both factors contributed significantly and uniquely to the likelihood that a family was perceived to engage in some form of child maltreatment.13 The link between parenting behaviors and child maltreatment suggests that interventions that promote positive parenting behaviors would also contribute to lower rates of child maltreatment among families served.
Course objectives focus on understanding the relationship between financial stability and child maltreatment prevention, understanding the parent's role as a provider, available resources, and strategies for ways to connect families to resources in communities.
: Time to Recurrence Among Frequency Encountered Families in CPS (PDF - 162 KB) Zhang, Fuller, & Nieto (2013) Children and Youth Services Review, 35 (5) Analyzes the association between the timing of prior child maltreatment intervals and the likelihood of repeat maltreatment.
Repeat Maltreatment in Alaska: Assessment and Exploration of Alternative Measures (PDF - 1055 KB) Vadapalli & Passini (2015) Examines recurring child maltreatment reporting trends between 2005 and 2013 to determine the differing rates of substantiated and unsubstantiaMaltreatment in Alaska: Assessment and Exploration of Alternative Measures (PDF - 1055 KB) Vadapalli & Passini (2015) Examines recurring child maltreatment reporting trends between 2005 and 2013 to determine the differing rates of substantiated and unsubstantiamaltreatment reporting trends between 2005 and 2013 to determine the differing rates of substantiated and unsubstantiated reports.
Finally, the close parallel relationship between experiences such as child maltreatment and involvement in the child welfare systems can make it difficult to disentangle the significance of each exposure.
Based on prior research suggesting that distinctions between allegations and substantiations are not useful, 31,32 official reports of alleged child abuse were coded using a slightly modified version33 of the maltreatment classification scheme developed by Barnett et al. 34 Three general indicators of child abuse were created, each dichotomized as present or not, based on the coding of the following records: (1) physical abuse (any blows or injury to the head, torso, buttocks, or limbs; and violent handling, choking, burning, shaking, or nondescript injury); (2) sexual abuse (any sexual exposure, exploitation, molestation, or penetration); and (3) psychological maltreatment (threats to psychological safety and security, lack of acceptance and threats to self - esteem, or failure to allow age - appropriate autonomy).
Recent retrospective and prospective studies have identified strong associations between cumulative traumatic childhood events, such as child maltreatment and family dysfunction, and adult physical disease, such as adult heart disease, liver disease, autoimmune diseases and sexually transmitted infections.36 - 41 Mental health disease and the use of psychotropic medications are also greater in adults who had been maltreated as children.42 - 45
Strategic Direction for Child Maltreatment Prevention: Preventing Child Maltreatment Through the Promotion of Safe, Stable, and Nurturing Relationships Between Children and Caregivers (PDF - 280 KB) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2009) Describes a strategy for child maltreatment prevention organized around four areas of public health research and practice: measuring impact, creating and evaluating new approaches to prevention, applying and adapting effective practices, and building community readiChild Maltreatment Prevention: Preventing Child Maltreatment Through the Promotion of Safe, Stable, and Nurturing Relationships Between Children and Caregivers (PDF - 280 KB) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2009) Describes a strategy for child maltreatment prevention organized around four areas of public health research and practice: measuring impact, creating and evaluating new approaches to prevention, applying and adapting effective practices, and building communitMaltreatment Prevention: Preventing Child Maltreatment Through the Promotion of Safe, Stable, and Nurturing Relationships Between Children and Caregivers (PDF - 280 KB) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2009) Describes a strategy for child maltreatment prevention organized around four areas of public health research and practice: measuring impact, creating and evaluating new approaches to prevention, applying and adapting effective practices, and building community readiChild Maltreatment Through the Promotion of Safe, Stable, and Nurturing Relationships Between Children and Caregivers (PDF - 280 KB) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2009) Describes a strategy for child maltreatment prevention organized around four areas of public health research and practice: measuring impact, creating and evaluating new approaches to prevention, applying and adapting effective practices, and building communitMaltreatment Through the Promotion of Safe, Stable, and Nurturing Relationships Between Children and Caregivers (PDF - 280 KB) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2009) Describes a strategy for child maltreatment prevention organized around four areas of public health research and practice: measuring impact, creating and evaluating new approaches to prevention, applying and adapting effective practices, and building community readichild maltreatment prevention organized around four areas of public health research and practice: measuring impact, creating and evaluating new approaches to prevention, applying and adapting effective practices, and building communitmaltreatment prevention organized around four areas of public health research and practice: measuring impact, creating and evaluating new approaches to prevention, applying and adapting effective practices, and building community readiness.
Child welfare professionals and domestic violence advocates recognize the common co-occurrence of domestic violence and child maltreatment, and acknowledgement of this significant overlap has led to more collaboration between these fiChild welfare professionals and domestic violence advocates recognize the common co-occurrence of domestic violence and child maltreatment, and acknowledgement of this significant overlap has led to more collaboration between these fichild maltreatment, and acknowledgement of this significant overlap has led to more collaboration between these fields.
Reducing rates of maltreatment, supporting struggling families and improving pediatric and adult outcomes for victims requires community - wide strategies, with true collaboration between child welfare, judicial, education, health and mental health colleagues to advocate for programs that are adequately tested and shown to be effective.
Understanding Child Maltreatment and Juvenile Delinquency: From Research to Effective Program, Practice, and Systemic Solutions (PDF - 297 KB) Bilchik (2003) Written to aid those in the judicial and child welfare systems understand the relationship between abuse and neglect and juvenile delinquChild Maltreatment and Juvenile Delinquency: From Research to Effective Program, Practice, and Systemic Solutions (PDF - 297 KB) Bilchik (2003) Written to aid those in the judicial and child welfare systems understand the relationship between abuse and neglect and juvenile delinquchild welfare systems understand the relationship between abuse and neglect and juvenile delinquency.
This cycle of abuse can occur when children who either experienced maltreatment or witnessed violence between their parents or caregivers learn to use physical punishment as a means of parenting their own children.
A recent review offers ambiguous support for the relation between home visitation and reductions in child maltreatment.2 The findings from several large - scale home - visitation efforts have shown disappointing short - term results in reducing family violence and child maltreatment.4, 9 A 15 - year follow - up study of the Elmira trial families, however, provided the first evidence from a randomized trial for the long - term effects of home visitation on reducing child maltreatment.10 Results from the follow - up showed that nurse - visited families had half as many child maltreatment reports as families in the comparison group.
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