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News America's Child Death Shame

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Lady of Longbourn

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From BBC

Millions of children are reported as abused and neglected every year

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Why is the problem of violence against children so much more acute in the US than anywhere else in the industrialised world, asks Michael Petit, President of Every Child Matters.

Over the past 10 years, more than 20,000 American children are believed to have been killed in their own homes by family members. That is nearly four times the number of US soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The child maltreatment death rate in the US is triple Canada's and 11 times that of Italy. Millions of children are reported as abused and neglected every year. Why is that?

Downward spiral

Part of the answer is that teen pregnancy, high-school dropout, violent crime, imprisonment, and poverty - factors associated with abuse and neglect - are generally much higher in the US.
Further, other rich nations have social policies that provide child care, universal health insurance, pre-school, parental leave and visiting nurses to virtually all in need.

In the US, when children are born into young families not prepared to receive them, local social safety nets may be frayed, or non-existent. As a result, they are unable to compensate for the household stress the child must endure.

In the most severe situations, there is a predictable downward spiral and a child dies. Some 75% of these children are under four, while nearly half are under one.

Geography matters a lot in determining child well-being. Take the examples of Texas and Vermont.

Texas prides itself in being a low tax, low service state. Its per capita income places it in the middle of the states, while its total tax burden - its willingness to tax itself - is near the bottom.

Vermont, in contrast, is at the other extreme. It is a high-tax, high-service state.

Mix of risks

In looking at key indicators of well-being, children from Texas are twice as likely to drop out of high school as children from Vermont. They are four times more likely to be uninsured, four times more likely to be incarcerated, and nearly twice as likely to die from abuse and neglect.

Texas spending
  • $6.25 billion (£4.01bn) spent in 2007 on direct and indirect costs dealing with after-effects of child abuse and neglect
  • $0.05 billion (£0.03bn) budgeted in 2011 for prevention and early intervention
Source: Univ of Houston, TexProtects
In Texas, a combination of elements add to the mix of risks that a child faces. These include a higher poverty rate in Texas, higher proportions of minority children, lower levels of educational attainment, and a political culture which holds a narrower view of the role of government in addressing social issues.

Texas, like many other traditionally conservative states, is likely to have a weaker response to families that need help in the first place, and be less efficient in protecting children after abuse occurs.

The sharp differences between the states raises the question of an expanded federal role.
Are children Texas children first? Or are they first American children with equal opportunity and protection?

Blame parents?

A national strategy, led by our national government, needs to be developed and implemented. For a start, the Congress should adopt legislation that would create a National Commission to End Child Abuse and Neglect Fatalities.

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Nearly half the child fatalities in 2009 were children under the age of on.

And no children's programmes should be on the chopping block, federal or state. Children did not crash the US economy. It is both shortsighted economic policy and morally wrong to make them pay the price for fixing it.

But instead as the US economy lags, child poverty soars, and states cut billions in children's services, we are further straining America's already weak safety net.

Inevitably, it means more children will die. The easy answer is to blame parents and already burdened child protection workers. But easy answers don't solve complex problems.

And with millions of children injured and thousands killed, this problem is large indeed, and it deserves a large response.
 
Tricky issues. So much to be done.

Thanks

One of the things we have done in my local area is institute breakfast programs where the children (and the parents are encouraged) to have breakfast together. Behaviourial problems dropped considerably from this one seemingly small project.

Pre-school seems to be an important factor in determining a life course for disadvantaged children.

Having a packet of crayons is important - though for so many people who don't come from poor backgrounds wouldn't understand access to simple experiences as that.

The Canadians put about 6 billion dollars in to early childhood prevention. Apparently for every dollar you spend when they are under five you save $25 later on.
 
Millions of dollars being poured through SuperPacs for media advertising to be used to gear the public'sattention away from such realities so that these are NOT issues Americans actually see, hear, or read about. Ours is NOT a Third World Country, umm right?!?!!
 
Coming from an area where there was a high level of poverty, this article just plain out breaks my heart.

I am at a loss for words and can only say, the system in the US is broken because they (politicians) are bought and paid for by large corporations- in general. The best interest of the people are no longer at hand. It is a break down that started some years before the evidence of its impact became predominant.

Preschool costs money, Education itself costs money, Job training costs money, insurance costs money- and money/poverty is one of the largest factors/roles/commonalities in childhood abuse.
 
A healthy, well-developed non-violent person develops the part of the brain called the pre-frontal cortex by the time they are 22ish. The prefrontal cortex is the part of the brain that is responsible for empathy, long term planning, and morals.

If a child does not have a positive attachment relationship (via parent, grandparent, teacher, aunt/uncle, etc.) to help them learn to regulate their emotions, this child will grow to become someone who is at risk of violence to themselves or others.

At a basic level this has to do with the layers of the brain. You have the "reptilian" fight/flight, the limbic and then the third higher level (the name of which eludes me at the moment). In the worst case scenario the kid who has no "adult" help, and needs to regulate a lot of stress, gets stuck in fight/flight mode. This leads to the fight/flight part to overdevelop. When they become violent citizens, we scratch our heads and wonder why. Basically, no one was there for them to nurture the brain to have a chance to develop in a beautiful way, with a healthy, well-developed pre-frontal cortex. (into someone who is empathic, moral, and able to plan ahead, and doesn't need to hurt themselves/others.)

This is obviously an oversimplification and my apologies if I got my facts wrong. (I don't think I did.) If you are interested in further reading, there is a policy type book that makes the case beautifully, but not enough that we Americans put more towards prevention. (Ghosts from the Nursery is the title.)

I spent 10 years as a preschool teacher, and have studied brain development. I have a double major Bachelors degree, and two masters degrees, if you want to know my credentials. It is so incredible to me that the pieces of research are there, but no one has reached across the various modes of thought (education, neurology, psychology) to bring the puzzle together.

Thanks for the article, Ayesha.
 
I had an opportunity to work at an inner city child care center for a while. This program focused on attachment relationship and sensory integration practices to help manage emotions and stress. I really believe that child care center in particular was saving some of our kids. I wish there were more like it, and even that some of the practices be made available (taught) for teachers and carers of other not "at-risk" kids.

(I never looked like I was "at-risk" but I was, and I bet a lot of you could say the same. If you are a teacher or someone who cares for children and are reading this, my advice to you is not to pay so much attention to the loud ones. It's the quiet ones who are in real trouble, and get looked over. Thanks.)
 
Part of the answer is that teen pregnancy, high-school dropout, violent crime, imprisonment, and poverty - factors associated with abuse and neglect - are generally much higher in the US. Further, other rich nations have social policies that provide child care, universal health insurance, pre-school, parental leave and visiting nurses to virtually all in need.
That pretty much answers it actually...

America refuses to shift from a Capitalist model to a Socialist one, where instead of every person for themselves and if you can't make it you die or suffer, instead with a socialist system everyone is given the basics to life. The working help support those who cannot, teen pregnancies, etc.

It has nothing to do with countries being rich or not, it has to do with the social policies and regulations other countries adopt and impose, where the US is so hell bent on being every person for themselves and trying to sell that as the "lucky country" to be free and independent.

Because citizens cannot fathom such a model because they haven't lived it, unless resided in such another country that has the model and have seen for themselves how much better the social structure works... then people will not change / will oppose it at any cost.

This is no different to the gun policy. When you don't allow guns, you don't have a gun problem. Even if the bad people have guns, the number is extremely limited.

When you have a socialist system, then when a teen gets pregnant, they get a single parents pension to support themselves and the baby, free medical, etc, so kids aren't succumbing to death.

That is the answer to why the US is so high vs. other countries. Most other countries have socialist structures to support those less fortunate.
 
Because citizens cannot fathom such a model because they haven't lived it, unless resided in such another country that has the model and have seen for themselves how much better the social structure works... then people will not change / will oppose it at any cost.

Perfect! That is so spot on! Before actually seeing it, experiencing it, touching its surface- I didn't know that it could feel like anything else but what it was before I expanded and experienced the feel of something else. I was unaware of how it really worked, because my thought process was driven by what the media and political parties had force fed me, all the while never knowing that I was being forced at all. Blinded by ignorance, because that is how they keep us. Intentionally.
 
When you have a socialist system, then when a teen gets pregnant, they get a single parents pension to support themselves and the baby, free medical, etc, so kids aren't succumbing to death.
I should add to my above statement... if the teen gets kicked out of home for getting pregnant, then they get money, housing, etc, to have their child. Its not going to be flash, but they get the basics to live and raise their children. If they or the child get sick, they have free medical, the best medical, that everyone gets equally, regardless of wealth. If they or the child need medications, its low cost and subsidised by the Government. If the parent then wants to go and work as the child gets older, they get subsidised child care and encouraged to get back into the work force. They're given free training for the job they want, education, etc... whatever it takes to get them back into the work force, which means they make more money and can live a better life than a single parent pension allows.

That is the incentive... the better the life you want, then you have all the help from the Government you need to get you back into working, thus now you become an active tax payer and contribute to the economy again.
 
Well, the USA is not going towards socialist practice any time soon as far as I can tell. It is not for lack of understanding or knowledge of what socialism entails. I appreciate the criticism of our governmental system, but that does not give us Americans practical solutions regarding prevention of violence and trauma with our children on a daily basis.

It is up to Americans who care to step up and try to create change at whatever level we can. It is things like the breakfast Ms. Spock wrote of that will make a positive change for the children of our country. (Because the tragedy is that there is less and less money for social programs, for children, elderly, and certainly not enough money for veterans.)

*steps off soap box*
 
Whilst I respect what you added Olaja, I will ask this...

How does a teen pregnant girl support herself if her parents kicked her out for getting pregnant? How does she support her baby, being a teenager?

The statistics for the US say, she heads towards the sexual industry, is homeless, has no medical coverage and increases her immediate status, and that of her babies, to death / abuse as a result of the US way of life.

I do agree, the US isn't going to change its policy any time soon... nor is a breakfast or such going to fix this problem or lower the death rate. That is a reactive solution, not a proactive one for longevity.
 
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