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Home > Conference Calendar > Conference Exhibits > 26th Annual 'Protecting Our Children' National American Indian Conference on Child Abuse and Neglect

26th Annual 'Protecting Our Children' National American Indian Conference on Child Abuse and Neglect

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The following Information Gateway materials were made available at the 26th Annual "Protecting Our Children" National American Indian Conference on Child Abuse and Neglect held April 20 to 23, 2008, in Minneapolis, MN.

2007 Kids Count Data Book: State Profiles of Child Well-Being: Lifelong Family Connections: Supporting Permanence for Children in Foster Care.
Author(s): Annie E. Casey Foundation.
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Year Published: 2007 - 196 pages
This 18th annual KIDS COUNT Data Book provides national and state-by-state information and statistical trends on the conditions of America's children and families. New this year is information on child well-being in Puerto Rico. This year's essay examines the child welfare system and challenges the country to make lifelong connections for children and youth in foster care a national priority. The essay also focuses on the 726,000 children who spend time in foster care each year and what can be done to build and strengthen family relationships.

A Coordinated Response to Child Abuse and Neglect: The Foundation for Practice. [CD-ROM Version]
Series Title: User Manual Series (2003)
Author(s): Office on Child Abuse and Neglect (HHS)
Goldman, Salus, Wolcott, Kennedy
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Year Published: 2003 - 114 pages
Written for new child protective services (CPS) caseworkers, professionals working with children and families, other professionals and concerned community members, this manual addresses the definition, scope, causes, and consequences of child abuse and neglect. It presents an overview of prevention efforts and the child protection process from identification and reporting through investigation and assessment to service provision and case closure. This manual is intended to accompany each profession-specific manual in the User Manual Series. Appendices include a glossary of terms, resource listings of selected national organizations concerned with child maltreatment, and State toll-free child abuse reporting numbers. 150 references.

Child Abuse and Neglect Among American Indian/Alaska Native Children: An Analysis of Existing Data
Author(s): Earle, Cross
Availability: Printable Version (PDF - 272 KB)
Year Published: 2001 - 70 pages
This study compared the findings of previous research about the incidence of child maltreatment in American Indian and Alaska Native families and analyzed data from the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System (NCANDS) for this population. The research review revealed significant differences in findings because of problems with definitions and data collection methods. However, most of the previous studies documented a high incidence of neglect, violence, alcohol abuse, and foster care in American Indian and Alaska Native children. Positive trends include a decrease in adoption rates and lower rates of sexual and physical abuse. The secondary analysis of NCANDS ...

Child Maltreatment 2005
Author(s): United States. Children's Bureau., Walter R. McDonald & Associates.
Gaudiosi
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Year Published: 2007 - 184 pages
This report summarizes child abuse statistics submitted by states to the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System (NCANDS) during 2005. See a list of all Child Maltreatment Reports. The data are presented in aggregate and by state, and trends are reported when available. Topics include sources of reports; time for response; victimization rates; types of maltreatment; age, race and gender of victims; age and gender of perpetrators; relationship of perpetrators to the victim; number of child fatalities; types of services provided; and additional research related to child maltreatment. During FFY 2005, an estimated 899,000 children in the 50 ...

Child Protection in Families Experiencing Domestic Violence. [CD-ROM Version]
Series Title: User Manual Series (2003)
Author(s): Office on Child Abuse and Neglect., Caliber Associates.
Bragg
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Year Published: 2003 - 108 pages
Domestic violence is a devastating social problem that affects every segment of the population. While system responses are primarily targeted towards adult victims of abuse, increasing attention is now focused on the children who witness domestic violence. Studies estimate that 10 to 20 percent of children are at risk for exposure to domestic violence. Research also indicates children exposed to domestic violence are at an increased risk of being abused or neglected, and that a majority of studies reveal there are adult and child victims in 30 to 60 percent of families who experience domestic violence. This manual provides background ...

Child Protective Services: A Guide for Caseworkers. 2003.
Series Title: User Manual Series (2003)
Author(s): Office on Child Abuse and Neglect (DHHS)
DePanfilis, Salus
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Year Published: 2003 - 141 pages
This manual, in CD-ROM format, examines the roles and responsibilities of child protective services (CPS) workers. It describes the purposes, key decisions, and issues of each stage of the CPS process: intake, initial assessment/investigation, family assessment, case planning, service provision, evaluation of family progress and case closure. The manual also covers strategies for casework supervision, training, and support. Appendices include a glossary of terms, resource listings of selected national organizations, State toll-free telephone numbers for reporting child abuse, and the National Association of Social Workers Code of Ethics. 8 tables and 173 references.

Enhancing Permanency for Older Youth in Out-Of-Home Care
Series Title: A Bulletin for Professionals
Author(s): Child Welfare Information Gateway
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Year Published: 2006 - 14 pages
Finding permanent families for older children and youth in out-of-home care continues to be a challenge for child welfare professionals. Many States and local jurisdictions have begun to implement programs specifically designed to help these youth establish permanent connections. This bulletin addresses the specific challenges of permanency planning with older youth, discussing the importance of focusing on older youth, barriers to permanency, strategies for successful permanency planning, and promising programs. A list of resources for further information is provided.

How the Child Welfare System Works
Series Title: Factsheet
Author(s): Child Welfare Information Gateway
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Year Published: 2008 - 8 pages
The child welfare system is a group of services designed to promote the well-being of children by ensuring safety, achieving permanency, and strengthening families to successfully care for their children. Child welfare systems are complex, and their specific procedures vary widely by State. The purpose of this factsheet is to give a brief overview of the purposes and functions of the child welfare system from a national perspective. It discusses what happens when a report of possible abuse or neglect is made, what happens when a report is screened in, and what happens in substantiated cases. It also discusses what ...

Improving Child Welfare Outcomes Through Systems of Care : Building the Infrastructure, a Guide for Communities.
Author(s): Technical Assistance and Evaluation Center for Systems of Care., United States. Children's Bureau.
DeCarolis, Southern, Blake
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Year Published: 2007 - 140 pages
This guide is designed to clarify for grantees the various activities that federal funds can support under the Improving Child Welfare Outcomes through Systems of Care program. It is organized into nine parts that correspond to the fundamental components of the infrastructure needed to support systems of care: planning, governance, system management, coordination of services and service array, communication, policy, finance, continuous quality improvement, and human resources and staff development. The parts are divided into sections that outline the definitions, goals, activities, personnel, and expected outcomes related to each component. In addition, the guide provides resources that illustrate further the ...

Postadoption Services
Series Title: Factsheet for Families
Author(s): Child Welfare Information Gateway
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Year Published: 2006 - 10 pages
It is common for adoptive families to need support and services after adoption. Postadoption services can help families with a wide range of issues. They are available for everything from learning how to explain adoption to a preschooler, to helping a child who experienced early childhood abuse, to helping with an adopted teen?s search for identity. Experience with adoptive families has shown that all family members can benefit from some type of postadoption support. Families of children who have experienced trauma, neglect, or institutionalization may require more intensive services.

Post-Legal Adoption Services For Children with Special Needs and Their Families : Challenges and Lessons Learned
Series Title: Grantee Lessons Learned
Author(s): Child Welfare Information Gateway
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Year Published: 2005 - 15 pages
With the goal of expanding and enhancing services to adoptive families of children with special needs, post-legal adoption services have been established in annual adoption discretionary grant announcements. Under that priority area in 1998, 15 3-year grants were awarded to increase permanency and well-being for children with special needs by preventing adoption disruption, dissolution, or out-of-home placement. This briefing paper synthesizes the final reports of those 15 projects. The projects targeted post-legal adoptive families and their children with special needs, pre-adoptive families, single adoptive parents, transracial adoptive families, kinship families. Core services included parent support and educational groups, children s ...

Promoting Healthy Families in Your Community : 2008 Resource Packet
Author(s): Child Welfare Information Gateway, Children's Bureau, FRIENDS National Resource Center For Community-Based Child Abuse Prevention
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Year Published: 2008 - 66 pages
This information packet was written to support child maltreatment prevention efforts by describing strategies and activities that promote protective factors. It is written for service providers, to encourage and support them as they engage and partner with parents to protect, nurture, and promote the healthy development of children. The packet includes suggestions for enhancing each of the five protective factors in families; tip sheets in English and Spanish for providers to use when working with parents and caregivers on specific parenting challenges; strategies for sharing the message about child abuse prevention in communities; and information about child abuse and neglect, ...

Screening and Assessment for Family Engagement, Retention and Recovery (SAFERR)
Series Title: DHHS Publication No. (SMA) 07-4261
Author(s): National Center on Substance Abuse and Child Welfare., United States. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
Young, Nakashian, Yeh, Amatetti
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Year Published: 2007 - 318 pages
This guidebook presents the SAFERR (Screening and Assessment for Family Engagement , Retention, and Recovery) model for helping staff of public and private agencies to families affected by substance use disorders. SAFERR was developed in response to frequent requests from managers of child welfare agencies for a "tool" that caseworkers could use to screen parents for potential substance use disorders in order to make decisions about children's safety. (Author abstract, modified)

Substance Abuse and Child Maltreatment
Series Title: Bulletin for Professionals
Author(s): Child Welfare Information Gateway
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Year Published: 2003 - 5 pages
Substance abuse has a major impact on the child welfare system. It is estimated that 9 percent of children in the United States live with at least one parent who abuses alcohol or other drugs. Research has demonstrated that children of substance abusing parents are more likely to experience abuse or neglect than children in non-substance abusing households. This fact sheet addresses the scope of the problem, the impact of parental substance abuse on children, service delivery issues, and agency practice implications. Resources for further information also are provided. 12 references.

Supervising Child Protective Services Caseworkers. [CD-ROM Version]
Series Title: User Manual Series (2004)
Author(s): Office on Child Abuse and Neglect., Caliber Associates.
Salus
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Year Published: 2004 - 110 pages
This manual provides the foundation for effective supervisory practice in child protective services (CPS). It describes the roles and responsibilities of the CPS supervisor, and it provides practice oriented advice on how to carry out supervisory responsibilities effectively. Best practices and critical issues in supervisory practice are underscored throughout. Topics include: The nature of CPS supervision; Making the transition from caseworker to supervisor; Building the foundation for effective unit performance; Building staff capacity and achieving excellence in performance; Supervisory feedback and performance recognition; Results-oriented management; Clinical supervision; Recruitment and retention; Managing from the middle; and Taking care of oneself and ...

Synthesis of Findings : Substance Abuse Child Welfare Waiver Demonstrations.
Author(s): James Bell Associates
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Year Published: 2005 - 35 pages
Since 1996, four States have implemented substance abuse waiver demonstrations: Delaware, New Hampshire, Illinois, and Maryland. Findings from Delaware and Illinois are summarized in this report. Findings from New Hampshire are incomplete; and Maryland obtained no data on the outcomes of its demonstration. The use of the title IV-E waiver demonstrations to implement substance abuse projects reflects a growing national realization that the substance abuse issues of parents must be addressed to decrease the incidence of out-of-home placement, reduce lengths of stay of children in out-of-home placement, and reduce the cost associated with foster care. These demonstrations have provided States ...

The Child Welfare-Substance Abuse Connection: A Compendium of Training Curricula and Resources
Author(s): U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services
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Year Published: 2003 - 97 pages
Substance abuse is a common problem in families reported for child abuse and neglect. However, social service workers often lack the skills to assess families for both risks. This compendium provides abstracts of training curricula developed between 1993 and 2003 for child welfare and substance abuse workers about addiction, child welfare, interagency collaboration, assessment, service provision, and treatment. Other topics include working with children and adolescents, legal processes, and the implications of substance abuse for foster care and adoption. Each profile identifies the intended audience of the curricula, the year of production, cost information, trainer availability, and technical assistance.

The Role of Educators in Preventing and Responding to Child Abuse and Neglect. [CD-ROM Version]
Series Title: User Manual Series (2003)
Author(s): Office on Child Abuse and Neglect., Caliber Associates.
Crosson-Tower
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Year Published: 2003 - 85 pages
This manual, designed to examine the roles that teachers, school counselors, school social workers, school nurses, special education professionals, administrators, and other school personnel have in helping maltreated children, provides the basis for the involvement of educators in combating the problem of child abuse and neglect. It also may be used by other professionals involved in child abuse and neglect interventions, such as child protective services, mental health, law enforcement, health care, and early childhood professionals, to gain a better understanding of the role of educators in child protection. Specifically, this manual addresses the following topics: Identifying reasons why educators ...

Tribal-State Relations
Series Title: Issue Brief
Author(s): Child Welfare Information Gateway
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Year Published: 2005 - 14 pages
Both the United States Congress and Tribal governments have articulated the importance of protecting the safety, permanency, and well-being of American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) children. Through the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) of 1978, Congress stated ". . . that there is no resource that is more vital to the continued existence and integrity of Indian tribes than their children" (25 U.S.C. Sec. 1901). Congress goes on to further assert that "it is the policy of this Nation to protect the best interests of Indian children and to promote the stability and security of Indian Tribes and families by the ...

Understanding Substance Abuse and Facilitating Recovery: A Guide for Child Welfare Workers
Author(s): National Center for Substance Abuse and Child Welfare., United States. Dept. of Health and Human Services. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
Breshears, Yeh, Young
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Year Published: 2004 - 34 pages
This publication is intended for front line child welfare staff. It discusses the relationship of alcohol and drugs to families in the child welfare system; provides information on the biological, psychological, and social processes of alcohol and drug addiction to help staff recognize when substance abuse is a risk factor in their cases; describes strategies to facilitate and support alcohol and drug treatment and recovery; and explains the benefits of partnering with substance abuse treatment and dependency court systems to improve outcomes for children of parents with substance use disorders. (Author abstract)

What is Child Welfare Information Gateway?
Author(s): Child Welfare Information Gateway
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Year Published: 2006 - 2 pages
Child Welfare Information Gateway promotes the safety, permanency, and well-being of children and families by connecting child welfare, adoption, and related professionals to information and resources that help them address the needs of children and families in their communities.

Working with the Courts in Child Protection
Series Title: User Manual Series (2006)
Author(s): Children's Bureau
Jones
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Year Published: 2006 - 130 pages
Part of a series of manuals designed to provide guidance on child protection practices, this manual explains court processes most relevant to child abuse and neglect cases. It introduces concepts and terminology associated with the courts, describes the key court processes, and presents practical information to help child protective services caseworkers prepare for court litigation. 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 ...

 

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