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How
to Intervene
On
this page:
What Parents and Caregivers Can Do
What Neighbors Can Do
What Professionals Can Do
There
is no age at which a child is immune to the effects of violence.
As health professionals, concerned parents, caregivers, and
citizens, we must work tirelessly to reduce, if not eliminate
violence in the lives of children. Interventions with children
who are affected by violence require multiple disciplines
and careful collaboration. No one profession can succeed alone.
Families are best helped when health providers, mental health
providers, educators, police and the courts work together.
What
Parents and Caregivers Can Do
Remember:
Children are not little adults. They have different and unique
ways of understanding violence. Listen carefully to how they
make sense of what happened.
- Use reassurance and a calm voice
when talking to a child, especially in the aftermath of
violence. Give children permission to tell their stories.
Sometimes it is difficult to listen to the child's distress,
but talking helps children heal.
- Remind children that the violence
is not their fault, and it is not their job to solve adult
problems.
- Remember, you can get specific
help from professionals in planning how to talk to children
about the violence they may have witnessed.
- Work to create a stable, safe
environment for the child.
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What
Neighbors Can Do
- If you know of a child who is
witnessing violence, you can help the child by helping his/her
parents. In the case of domestic violence, you can help
by supporting and helping the battered partner.
- Call the resources listed in
this web site to ask questions and get support for yourself
as well as the person you are concerned about.
- Be supportive of your neighbor
or friend and express your concern. Simple statements like,
"I am concerned about you. How have you been doing?"
can make a lasting difference.
- Share the telephone numbers
of support services with the person you think is in need
of the information. If the violence is domestic violence,
share those numbers privately.
- Be willing to make a phone call
for your friend or neighbor.
- If needed, help them get to
a safe place. Perhaps give them a ride or call a taxi for
them.
- If possible, help them find
a safe place to stay.
- If necessary, support them in
getting legal or housing assistance.
- Remember that if the violence
you are concerned about is domestic violence, you don't
help the victim by confronting the batterer yourself. Have
trained professionals respond.
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What
Professionals Can Do
Careful
consideration should be given to the assessment and treatment
of children who witness violence. The following serve only
as guidelines for professional intervention.
- Stabilize the environment for the child and the
family.
- Give family members support and information about
how children respond to witnessing violence. Caregivers
may be unaware of how affected young children are from exposure
to violent behavior.
- Devise strategies for reducing symptoms.
- Elicit an understanding of the meaning of the
violent event(s) for the child.
- Correct cognitive distortions about the event.
- Allow the child to play and replay the specifics
of the traumatic event in therapy.
- Provide activities that promote a child's competence
and self-esteem.
- Collaborate with all agencies and care providers
that are part of a child's life.
- Pay attention to your own feelings of helplessness.
- Save time and energy for advocacy at the larger
level.
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*Reprinted
from The Child Witness to Violence Project, Boston Medical
Center
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