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NCCPR at the Kempe Center Conference: Attn: Family Police: Children's "well-being" is none of your damn business!

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

This provision of law has never been enforced and is almost universally ignored. Among those who suffer most: children of domestic violence survivors. There’s also a need to deal with another aspect of reporting: ● Replace anonymous reporting – by far the least reliable source of reports – with confidential reporting.

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Maternal Mental Health Matters: A Neglected but Vital Issue

Relias

Developed by the California Maternal Quality Care Collaborative , the bundle consists of four components: universal screening, timely referral, access to treatment, and follow-up. By following these steps, healthcare professionals can help mothers overcome mental health challenges. However, healthcare professionals cannot do it alone.

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All You Need To Know About Social Work Articles

Social Work Haven

In social work, various articles cover topics such as social work articles on mental health, social work articles on domestic violence, social work articles on learning disabilities, medical social work articles, school social work articles and clinical social work articles. Social Work Quotes.

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NCCPR family preservation news and commentary round-up for the year 2024, part two

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

Decades later, Stacy Torres, now a professor of sociology at the University of California, San Francisco, writes in Vital City that the wounds have not healed. But the Administration for Childrens Services considers itself free to harass domestic violence victims and their children by putting them under constant surveillance.

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NCCPR family preservation news and commentary round-up for the year 2023, Part Two

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

WITNESSING DOMESTIC VIOLENCE ● “Which would be worse,” asks Jasmine Wali, former director of policy & advocacy at JMAC for Families, in this story for The Nation : “being beaten by your partner, or having social services take away your children? . ● See also the Virginia Journal of Social Policy & the Law , where Prof.