How to Detect & Report Child Abuse
 
Direct Evidence:

Eyewitness observations of a parent’s abusive or neglectful behavior

Child’s description of being abused or neglected

Parent’s description of abusive or neglectful behavior

Accounts of child maltreatment from a spouse or other family members

Films, photographs, or other visual material depicting a minor’s sexually explicit activity

Newborns who are denied nutrition, life sustaining care, or other medically indicated treatment

Children in physically dangerous situations

Young children who are left alone

Apparently abandoned children

Parent’s demonstrated disabilities (for example, mental illness or retardation or alcohol or drug abuse) that are severe enough to make child abuse or child neglect likely

Parent’s demonstrated inability to care for a newborn baby

Circumstantial Evidence:

“Suspicious” injuries that suggest physical abuse

Physical injuries or medical findings that suggest sexual abuse

For young children, signs of sexual activity

Signs of severe physical deprivation on the child’s body that suggest general neglect

Severe dirt and disorder in the home that suggest general neglect

Apparently untreated physical injuries, illnesses, or impairments that suggest medical neglect

“Accidental” injuries that suggest gross inattention to the child’s need for safety

Parent’s apparent indifference to a child’s severe psychological or developmental problems

Chronic and unexplained absences from school for which the parent is apparently responsible

A newborn who shows signs of fetal exposure to drugs or alcohol

Recognizing Child Abuse: A Guide for the Concerned – by Douglas J. Besharov

 

Home
| About Mac | CASA | CAPC | News & Events | Volunteer
Donate | Report Child Abuse | Contact Us

© 2010 Marin Advocates for Children. All rights reserved. Various trademarks
held by their respective owners. Website designed by SunDesign Studios.




   
  Children’s Services Child Protective Services
3250 Kerner Blvd.,
San Rafael, CA. 94901
24 Hour Hotline: 415-473-7153

 
 
Reports to the Police

When should a report to the police, rather than Child Protective Services, be made?

 
  When someone other than a parent has abused the child

  When the child protective agency cannot be reached (such as at night or on weekends and holidays) and an immediate response is needed*

  When speed is essential and the proximity of the police to the child gives the police faster access than the child protective agency

  When assistance is needed to protect a child from injury (usually by gaining access to a home or by placing the child in protective custody against the parents' wishes)

  When it appears that the suspected perpetrator should be arrested (usually, only in serious cases when there is reason to believe that he or she may flee)

  When assistance is needed to protect the person reporting or otherwise to maintain order (for example, when the parent becomes belligerent or physically threatening.)

  When assistance is needed to preserve evidence

  The foregoing factors are not the same as those used by the police to decide whether to make an arrest or to begin criminal prosecution -- decisions that the person who is reporting does not make.

Recognizing Child Abuse
– by Douglas J. Besharov