200×200
Main Topics
200×200 #2
-
Recent Articles
- Modifying a Custody Order
- Using Mediation to Avoid the High Costs of Divorce
- Child Custody Court Forms by State
- Bankruptcy Before Divorce
- Alienation of Affection
- Bankruptcy & Divorce: an Overview
- Bankruptcy After Divorce
- Bankruptcy During Divorce
- What’s the difference between a divorce and a legal separation?
- What is the Visa Lottery Program?
Pages
You may also be interested in these articles
- Signs of Physical Child Abuse
- Child Abuse
- Child Sexual Abuse
- What are the alternatives to emancipation of a minor?
- Types of Child Custody
- Older Child Adoption
- Do I Have to Pay Child Support if We’re Not Married?
- Child Custody and Visitation
- Legal Guardianship
- Children, Custody, Child Support, and Other Parenting Issues
Child Neglect
How To Spot The Warning Signs
One of the most prevalent types of child abuse, neglect results in more deaths than the other types of abuse combined.
“Neglect” is defined as the physical, mental or emotional impairment or the danger of impairment of a child less than 18 years of age as the result of the failure of the child’s legal guardian(s) to provide a minimum degree of care by providing the child with proper supervision as well as basic necessities such as food, clothing, shelter, medical care and education.
Signs of neglect include:
Most children who are neglected will also demonstrate a variety of behavioral problems including aggressive or destructive behavior, moodiness or depression, unfounded fear, cruelty and a lack of interest in schoolwork.
When infants are involved, the neglect can sometimes be more difficult to spot however, most neglected infants don’t have the normal responsiveness to adults that nurtured babies would have. Toddlers will often lack the normal learning progression appropriate for that age and as with older children, indicators such as a lack of care, clothing and supervision may still be fairly evident.
Parents or guardians of the child may also offer additional warning signs such as a general disinterest in the child’s well-being as well as abuse of alcohol or drugs. Neglectful parents rarely attend parent-teacher conferences and consistently miss appointments and fail to respond to inquiries and/or recommendations.
If you suspect that a child is being neglected, contact your local police department immediately. They can put you in touch with special counselors and organizations that can investigate the suspected neglect and provide resources and refuge for the neglected child.