What Is Child Neglect? Signs, Consequences & Tips To Prevent
Know the warning signs and the steps you can take.
In This Article
You may have heard of the term child neglect, but what is child neglect? Child neglect is a form of ill-treatment wherein a parent, a caregiver, or the one in a custodial role fails to provide the child with their basic needs, such as food, clothing, shelter, education, and healthcare (1). Child neglect is the most common form of child abuse and has long-term effects on the child’s physical and mental health (2) (3).
Immediate reporting of child neglect is essential to ensure timely care and support to a child suffering from neglect. In addition, community care programs play an important role in educating and spreading awareness about child neglect and can help prevent ill-treatment and reduce its effects.
Read this post to learn about the signs of identifying child neglect, different types of child neglect, causes, consequences, treatment options, and preventive measures.
Types Of Child Neglect
Child neglect is a broad term that encompasses neglecting a child’s physical, social, emotional, and medical needs. The following are the most common types of child neglect (4).
1. Physical neglect: Abandoning a child, refusing to accept their custody, or failing to fulfill their essential nutrition, hygiene, and clothing needs.
2. Emotional neglect: Isolating the child or exposing them to an emotionally abusive environment involving domestic violence and substance abuse. It also entails the failure to provide an emotionally secure and supportive environment to the child or not paying attention to their emotional breakups with friends /situations in life.
3. Educational neglect: Not enrolling the child in a school or home school, ignoring their special education needs, or allowing chronic absenteeism from school without justifiable reason or cause. Not providing essential school books and forcing them to attain particular rank with neglible resources.
4. Medical neglect: Delaying or refusing to provide necessary or recommended healthcare treatments or immunizations (even if they are based on society or cultural belief).
5. Supervisory neglect: Leaving a child alone or unsupervised at home, or leaving them with insufficient care arrangements, especially when they can’t take care of themselves.
Being preoccupied with personal career and family responsibilities, pleasures or addiction.
Signs Of Child Neglect
Identifying child neglect can be complex, especially during the early stages, and you can’t ascertain or confirm possible negligence only when the condition has reached its extreme.
Here are some warning signs that may help you notice and ascertain if a child is experiencing neglect (3) (5).
- Poor hygiene and disheveled appearance
- Dirty and smelly
- Chronic absenteeism from school
- Inappropriate or inadequate clothing for the weather
- Frequently missing health check-ups, such as dental checks or scheduled vaccinations
- Extreme hunger, making them beg or steal food
- Untreated physical injuries and uncared open wounds
- Left alone at home without supervision and care
- Severe malnourishment with health issues, such as anemia
- Extreme physical and psychological growth or development issues
- Erratic behavior, with signs of self-harm, substance abuse, withdrawal, aggression, and isolation
- Poor beahvior with classmates and mutism for expression
The severity of signs may vary depending on the child’s age and the frequency and duration of neglect.
Risk Factors Of Child Neglect
There’s no single cause for child neglect. Research suggests that child neglect occurs due to the complex interplay of several risk factors present in children and their environment (1) (3) (6).
Most often, parents do not neglect their children intentionally. Most child neglect cases occur where the parents themselves had a neglected or abused childhood, or the parents are
- Relatively young and inexperienced, so they are unaware of proper child-rearing practices.
- Poor or belong to economically weaker sections, rendering them unable to fulfill their child’s basic needs, such as healthy food, proper clothes, and timely medical care.
- Separated or divorced and have separate families to look after.
- Alcoholics or indulge in drug abuse and aren’t physically and mentally capable of taking care of their children.
- Unwanted child
Besides these, when a parent or both the parents are sick, disabled, or incarcerated, child neglect is highly likely to occur.
Children with disabilities and chronic illnesses and children born to poor households or in dangerous neighborhoods are at a higher risk of neglect.
Consequences Of Child Neglect On Children
Persistent child neglect affects the health and overall development of a child. Some of these effects are lasting and may cause irreversible damages to the child’s mental and physical well-being. The following are some of the effects of chronic neglect that a neglected child may experience (7) (8) (9).
1. Physical growth and development issues: A neglected child often doesn’t receive quality food, which puts them at risk of malnourishment. A malnourished child has poor physical growth, lowered immunity, poor muscle tone, and weak muscle strength. Additionally, they don’t have timely access to immunization which compounds their risk of developing health issues, such as diabetes, poorer lung functioning, and vision and oral health problems.
2. Cognitive problems: According to the Children’s Bureau, child neglect can affect the formation, function, and growth of specific brain regions. Additionally, chronic neglect can cause toxic stress, which can affect brain development in early life. The child’s poor brain development can result in a range of problems, from delayed or impaired language development to attention deficit and low I.Q.
3. Psychological concerns: Chronic neglect can make children feel isolated and depressed. They can also develop feelings of fear and distrust. Due to the build-up of such negative emotions, children may develop attachment issues, low levels of enthusiasm, poor self-esteem, and low self-confidence, all of which can hinder their ability to maintain healthy relationships.
4. Social and behavioral problems: Depending on the severity of neglect or abuse, children exhibit several behavioral issues. They may often indulge in risky activities, such as unsafe sexual practices, alcohol and substance abuse, and criminal activities at a young age, leading to adult criminality.
Treatment For Child Neglect
Treatment and management of child neglect begin with its reporting. Once a child neglect case is reported, a social worker or a child protective services (CPS) officer will contact the family and schedule a home visit or family interview.
In some cases, child safety is assured by educating the family on child neglect and providing them the necessary resources, such as financial aid.
In other cases, children may be placed in some other facility, such as a foster home, to ensure the child is safe. Once the child is safe, health professionals and physicians begin therapy, depending upon the health concerns the child is facing (10).
1. Developmental therapy: This therapy helps determine the effects of chronic neglect on a child’s physical growth and development. Depending on the evaluation, the therapy is performed to resolve or overcome the growth and development issues.
2. Intrapersonal therapy: This therapy studies how child neglect has altered the child’s personality and interpersonal abilities. Based on the investigation, a treatment course to rectify the child’s interpersonal issues is recommended.
3. Cognitive and behavioral therapy (CBT): CBT helps analyze how neglect has affected the cognitive and behavioral functioning of the child. Based on the investigation, the therapist helps the child overcome their cognitive concerns and improve their behavior.
Besides a therapist, medical, dental care, and educational service providers may also work with the child. If the child is involved in substance abuse or any criminal activity, the concerned federal, state, or local agencies will intervene to correct or rehabilitate the child.
How To Report Child Neglect?
The guidelines to how and who needs to report child neglect varies from country to country and from state to state within a country. For instance, some states in the US allow only medical professionals, teachers, childcare providers, and law enforcement officers to report child neglect. On the other hand, in some states, any person who suspects or witnesses child neglect can register a case (11).
If you are in the US and know a child neglect victim, call or text the Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline 1.800.4.A.CHILD (1.800.422.4453) to speak with a professional. A trained professional will investigate the case and conduct a comprehensive assessment to help determine which services will be needed to keep the child safe.
Tips To Prevent Child Neglect
Here’s what you can do to prevent child neglect around you (12) (13).
1. Know the signs of child abuse or neglect. Child neglect is different than child abuse. Its signs are often not easily recognizable, especially when the abuse hasn’t been happening for long.
2. Educate yourself and others about the types of neglect. This learning is necessary for children and adults who feel that neglect only means failure to provide food and shelter. They often aren’t aware that negligence can be emotional or educational.
3. Invest your time in community service. Help vulnerable families and their children by educating them about child neglect and its effects on one’s health. Share ways to seek help for themselves and others whenever they require it.
4. Participate in after-school activities, such as parent education classes and mentoring programs that educate parents on child abuse and neglect. Motivate other parents in the community to attend these programs to get the right professional help to identify child neglect and act on it.
5. Report child abuse or neglect. As soon as you witness a child neglect case, report it to the concerned authorities. You can contact your local police or state’s child protection services. Until the concerned person arrives, talk to the child and reassure them that they have done the right thing by talking to an adult.
Listen to them carefully and motivate them to share the issues they have been facing. Collect as many details as you can and share them with the concerned person. Do not force the child to talk if they look scared or fearful.
6. Be a foster parent and help a family avert child neglect. You can provide foster care to vulnerable children and fulfill their needs. Alternatively, you can offer financial or moral support to a family and keep them afloat in challenging and stressful times.
7. Donate what you can. This way, you can support one or more families with the essentials that they need. Diapers, clothing, toys, utensils, etc., are some items that you can donate. A donation drive is another good initiative that you can organize to encourage your privileged neighbors to help the needy in your community.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Is leaving a child home alone legally considered child neglect?
Legal considerations for child neglect may vary from one state to the other. For example, laws or guidelines regarding the minimum age at which a child may be left home alone are implemented in only 14 states of the USA. Even the ages are not fixed and range from 6 to 14 years (14).
2. When will a neglected child be taken away from his or her parents?
Legal interventions to take a child away from his or her parents are mostly seen in cases of physical and sexual abuse rather than neglect. However, in extreme cases of child neglect where various other legal interventions have failed to improve the treatment of the family towards the child, the court may intervene to terminate parental rights. The child may then be adopted or moved to another permanent placement (15).
3. Can child neglect lead to PTSD?
Early childhood neglect may cause a person to develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) (16).
Child neglect is a broad term; hence, understanding its exact meaning is essential for parents and caregivers. Physical and emotional neglect in children may occur when their physical and emotional needs, such as food, care, or attention, are not met. Not enrolling children in school or homeschooling is considered educational neglect. Further, medical neglect involves not providing them with adequate treatments or the recommended immunizations. Child neglect also includes supervisory neglect, where the parents or caregiver leaves the child alone at home or fails to make supervision or care arrangements. Since child neglect can affect their long-term health, it is dealt with gravely and is a punishable offense in many countries.
Key Pointers
- Physical, emotional, educational, medical, and supervisory neglect are all types of child neglect.
- Poor hygiene, being smelly, frequent and chronic absence from school, etc., are some red flags that may indicate a case of child abuse.
- Child neglect can leave a long-lasting and irreversible impact on a child.
References
2. Child Abuse and Neglect;NCBI
3. Child Abuse and Neglect;AAP
4. Acts of Omission: An Overview of Child Neglect;U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
5. Child Neglect: A Guide for Prevention, Assessment, and Intervention;Child Welfare Information
6. Esmina Avdibegović and Maja Brkić;Child Neglect – Causes and Consequences;NCBI
7. Long-Term Consequences of Child Abuse and Neglect;U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
8. Effects Of Abuse And Neglect On Child Development;University of Washington
9. Neglect;Harvard University
10. Child Abuse and Neglect Treatment;Intermountain Healthcare
11. How to Report Child Abuse and Neglect;Child Welfare Information
12. Preventing Child Abuse and Neglect;U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
13. Ten ways you can help prevent child abuse and neglect;The Rapidian
14. Charles A. Jennissen et al.; Child abuse and neglect experts’ determination of when a child being left home alone constitutes child neglect; NCBI
15. Child Neglect: A Guide for Prevention, Assessment and Intervention; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
16. Post-traumatic stress caused by early childhood neglect; ART International
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