TY - BOOK AU - Palusci,Vincent J. TI - Preventing child abuse:: critical roles and multiple perspectives T2 - Pediatrics, child and adolescent health SN - 9781536196962 AV - HV6626 .P748 2021 KW - Child abuse KW - Prevention KW - Child welfare KW - Electronic Books N1 - 2; Chapter 1: Introduction: The expanding case for prevention --; Chapter 2: The case for prevention: Epidemiology and impact of child abuse and neglect --; Section II: Universal strategies --; Chapter 3: The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the child and the prevention of child maltreatment in the United States --; Chapter 4: Federal funding and the prevention of child maltreatment --; Chapter 5: Pathways to prevention: Prevention Zones as a strategy for making progress in child maltreatment prevention --; Chapter 6: Economic supports for families --; Chapter 7: Home visiting to prevent maltreatment --; Chapter 8: No Hit Zones in context: Changing norms through planned change --; Chapter 9: Using technology in child welfare and child abuse prevention --; Chapter 10: The media and child maltreatment prevention --; Chapter 11: Creating a national foundation to end child abuse and neglect --; Section II: Targeted problems and populations --; Chapter 12: Infant crying and the prevention of abusive head trauma --; Chapter 13: Eliminating corporal punishment --; Chapter 14: Disability and abuse: Some international aspects --; Chapter 15: A critical analysis of efforts to prevent the sexual abuse of youth --; Chapter 16: Child abuse prevention in the faith-based environment --; Chapter 17: Adolescent abuse: Selective issues including prevention --; Chapter 18: Preventing athlete harm in youth sports --; Chapter 19: Prevention of human trafficking in children --; Chapter 20: Child fatality review and programs to prevent child maltreatment deaths --; Section IV: Professional Issues --; Chapter 21: Health-based interventions --; Chapter 22: Preventing child maltreatment through medical-legal partnership --; Chapter 23: Prevention services through Child Protective Services --; Chapter 24: Does mandatory reporting have a place in a more prevention-focused child maltreatment system? --; Section V: Acknowledgments --; Chapter 25: About the editors --; Chapter 26: About the Department of Pediatrics, New York University Grossman School of Medicine and Bellevue Hospital, New York, United States --; Chapter 27: About the Child Advocacy Law Clinic, School of Law, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States --; Chapter 28: About the Department of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, Western Michigan University Homer Stryker MD School of Medicine, Kalamazoo, Michigan, United States --; Chapter 29: About the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in Israel; 2; b N2 - "When we think of child abuse, we imagine several different forms of harmful parenting and injuries to children. Most are not visible to the naked eye, but can be seen if you look more deeply. X-rays can detect fractures and other imaging can find internal injury and bleeding, but most maltreated children have more long-lasting harm that reveals itself through behavioral and emotional maladjustment, developmental delay, sadness, and other destructive behaviors later in childhood, adolescence and into adulthood. These injuries to their personality, sense of self, relationship to society and mental health change the trajectory of their lives and dim their potential, with social and financial costs for safety, treatment and their lost personal growth. We think of these as affecting everybody's children and that the responsibility lies with everyone to respond. This is why we put together this book: to address prevention from a number of perspectives and a variety of professions. We hope that it successfully brings together a number of disciplines and perspectives to address child abuse and neglect among the world's families, governments and cultures. We hope that those reading these chapters will realize that there are replicable best practices that can be reliably implemented based on child and family experiences and needs rather than single approaches designed to attack single forms of maltreatment, and we look forward to the day that books like these are not needed"-- UR - httpss://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=2925480&site=eds-live&custid=s3260518 ER -