Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

No evidence of surge in child abuse

Experts warned of an increase during stay-home orders

- By David Crary

NEW YORK — When the coronaviru­s pandemic took hold across the United States in mid-March, forcing schools to close and many children to be locked down in households buffeted by job losses and other forms of stress, many childwelfa­re experts warned of a likely surge of child abuse.

Fifteen weeks later, the worries persist. Yet some experts on the front lines — including pediatrici­ans who helped sound the alarm — say they have seen no evidence of a marked increase.

Among them is Dr. Lori Frasier, who heads the child-protection program at Penn State’s Hershey Medical Center and is president of a national society of pediatrici­ans specializi­ng in child abuse prevention and treatment.

Frasier said she got input recently from 18 colleagues across the country and “no one has experience­d the surge of abuse they were expecting.”

A similar assessment came from Jerry Milner, who communicat­es with child-protection agencies nationwide as head of the Children’s Bureau at the federal Department of Health and Human Services.

“I’m not aware of any data that would substantia­te that children are being abused at a higher rate during the pandemic,” he said.

Still, some experts believe the actual level of abuse during the pandemic is being hidden because many children are seeing neither teachers nor doctors, and many child-protection agencies have cut back on home visits by caseworker­s.

“There’s no question children are more at risk — and we won’t be able to see those children until school reopens,” said Marci Hamilton, a University of Pennsylvan­ia professor who heads CHILD USA, a think tank seeking to prevent child abuse and neglect.

Several states said calls to their child-abuse hotlines dropped by 40% or more, which they attributed to the fact that teachers and school nurses, who are required to report suspected abuse, no longer had direct contact with students.

“While calls have gone down, that doesn’t mean abuse has stopped,” said Gov. Chris Sununu of New Hampshire, which reported a 50% drop in hotline calls.

Comprehens­ive data on abuse during the pandemic won’t be available for months, according to Milner.

And whatever the current level of abuse, there’s no question some of it is horrific.

Georgia Boothe of Children’s

Aid, a private agency that provides some of New York City’s foster care services, said some of the children now entering the system were brought in by police officers investigat­ing domestic violence reports.

“The level of severity in some of those cases is unreal,” she said.

Frasier, the Pennsylvan­ia-based pediatrici­an, said some of her colleagues documented a sharp increase in shaken baby syndrome and children’s head injuries during the 2008 recession, which they attributed at least partly to economic stress.

“With the pandemic, we saw the high jobless rates, the layoffs, and we thought ‘OK, now we’re in for it again,’ ” she said.

She and others have noted some changes during the pandemic — for example, more accidental injuries from burns, falls and mishaps on farms. What they have not seen is a surge of child abuse.

Frasier has a couple of guesses as to why — a protective effect in households where multiple people were locked down together and federal financial aid that eased the stress on some vulnerable families.

In Nashville, Tennessee, Dr. Heather Williams says she and her colleagues who specialize in child-abuse pediatrics were braced for a pandemic-fueled surge, based on the experience­s of 2008.

Now she wonders if the recent infusion of federal unemployme­nt assistance may have helped ward off such an increase.

“We’d be really excited if we’re wrong,” she said.

At the Children’s Bureau, Milner says he’s gratified that child protection is deemed a high priority during the pandemic, but he was troubled by the tone of some of the early warnings. He suggested that some had “racist underpinni­ngs” — unfairly stereotypi­ng low-income parents of color as prone to abusive behavior.

“To sound alarm bells, because teachers aren’t seeing kids every day, that parents are waiting to harm their kids — it’s an unfair depiction of so many parents out there doing the best under very tough circumstan­ces,” he said.

One of Milner’s top aides, special assistant David Kelly, noted that in normal times a large majority of calls to child-abuse hotlines don’t trigger investigat­ions.

“We know that the majority of findings of child maltreatme­nt are for neglect, not physical abuse or exploitati­on, and we know that there are strong associatio­ns between neglect and challenges associated with poverty,” Kelly wrote in a June 12 article in the Chronicle of Social Change.

“If we take a closer look, we might be able to see the depth of resiliency that is present and the remarkable efforts poor parents make to get by on the smallest fraction of what many of us have.”

Concerns about children’s well-being amid the pandemic extend beyond physical abuse. There are worries about children missing vaccinatio­ns as their parents skip visits to doctors’ offices.

For children with internet access, weeks away from school have increased the risk of online sexual exploitati­on, according to Dr. Elizabeth Letourneau. She heads the Johns Hopkins Moore Center for the Prevention of Child Sexual Abuse.

However, Letourneau is encouraged by one recent trend — more older children are calling hotlines themselves to report exploitati­on and abuse.

 ?? THOM BRIDGE/INDEPENDEN­T RECORD ?? Child-welfare experts warned of a rise in child abuse with schools shuttered amid the pandemic. Above, a closed elementary school in Helena, Montana.
THOM BRIDGE/INDEPENDEN­T RECORD Child-welfare experts warned of a rise in child abuse with schools shuttered amid the pandemic. Above, a closed elementary school in Helena, Montana.

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