Topic > Child Abuse Prevention - 2822

According to the Australian Childhood Foundation (2004 (, Professionals working to prevent child abuse and neglect of ideas and information from other disciplines, including public health, education, mental health, and to influence and guide Practice, however, has had the greatest influence on public health organization in the context of prevention services framework is composed of three levels of services: primary prevention programs, aimed at the general population (summer) in an attempt to prevent abuse before it occurs, and secondary prevention programs, aimed at individuals or families who are more likely to experience abuse (high risk), and tertiary prevention programs, targeting families of abuse that has already occurred (referred to)States involved in a variety of prevention activities, some of which fall under Community-Based Child Abuse Prevention (CBCAP) funding and some programs that fall under other federal activities include CBCAP which works with communities and families to prevent child abuse and neglect. Examples include public awareness campaigns and home visiting programs for new mothers, conversion programs for at-risk families and parent support groups (Australian Childhood Foundation, 2004). When applied to the sector, the protection and care of children and the provision of a model service for public health and the theoretical framework that extends the continuity of the service of early intervention services aimed at all, secondary intervention services aimed at families in need , intervention services aimed at higher level families in which abuse or neglect has already occurred as shown in the figure (). He was referring to prevention programs targeting different groups with varying degrees of risk… half of the document… the nature of the service. The country witnessed another project in 2005. The National Family Safety Program is a government agency dedicated to preventing child abuse and neglect. The study by (Al Eissa & Almuneef, 2010) indicated five conditions for implementing child maltreatment prevention programs, which are: (1) Political will together with citizens to solve the problem. (2) Issuance of appropriate legalizations. (3) Collaboration between relevant sectors. (4) availability of data (5) awareness campaigns and adequate human resources. Child maltreatment prevention is gaining more attention, but many professionals are calling for child maltreatment to become a societal priority. While intervention and treatment programs have seen some success, effective prevention will combat all forms of maltreatment