Tips for helping parents in the community and vulnerable children in being mindful and examining the way you discipline your own children.
- Volunteer your time. Get involved with other parents in your community. Help vulnerable children and their families.
- Discipline your children thoughtfully. Never discipline your child when you are upset. Give yourself time to calm down.
- Examine your behavior. Abuse is not just physical. Both words and actions can inflict deep, lasting wounds.
- Educate yourself and others. Simple support for children and parents can be the best way to prevent child abuse. After-school activities, parent education classes and mentoring programs are some of the many ways to keep children safe from harm.
- Teach children their rights. When children are taught they are special and have the right to be safe, they are less likely to think abuse is their fault, and more likely to report an offender.
- Support prevention programs. Too often, intervention occurs only after abuse is reported. Greater investments are needed in programs that have been proven to stop the abuse before it occurs – such as family counseling.
- Know what child abuse is. Physical and sexual abuse clearly constitute maltreatment, but so do neglect, failure of parents or other caregivers to provide a child with needed food, clothing, and care. Children can also be emotionally abused when they are rejected, berated, or continuously isolated.
- Know the signs. Unexplained injuries aren’t the only signs of abuse. Depression, fear of a certain adult, difficultly trusting others or making friends, sudden changes in eating or sleeping patterns, inappropriate sexual behavior, poor hygiene, secrecy, and hostility are often signs of family problems and may indicate a child is being neglected or physically, sexually, or emotionally abused.
- Report abuse. If you witness a child being harmed or see evidence of abuse, make a report to your state’s child protective services department or local police.
- Invest in kids. Encourage leaders in the community to be supportive of children and families.
Child Abuse Series:
_
The Cleveland Police Foundation, in partnership with the Cleveland Division of Police and the Ohio Crime Prevention Association present these tips so citizens can help to make our community safer.