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Victim Advocacy with Children Exposed to Domestic Violence

Victim Advocacy with Children Exposed to Domestic Violence. Kathryn Ford, LMSW Center for Court Innovation 520 8 th Ave., 18 th Floor New York, NY 10018 (646) 386-4181 fordk@courtinnovation.org. What Do Kids Need to Heal & Grow?. Sense of safety, structure, limits & predictability

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Victim Advocacy with Children Exposed to Domestic Violence

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  1. Victim Advocacy with Children Exposed to Domestic Violence Kathryn Ford, LMSW Center for Court Innovation 520 8th Ave., 18th Floor New York, NY 10018 (646) 386-4181 fordk@courtinnovation.org

  2. What Do Kids Need to Heal & Grow? • Sense of safety, structure, limits & predictability • Not feeling responsible for adults, clear message about responsibility for DV • Good boundaries around adult info • Strong bond to primary caregiver: Feel she can protect them, respect her, feel supported in having strong relationship Adapted from Lundy Bancroft.

  3. Principles for Supportive Response • Use a developmental, child-centered, strengths-based perspective • View child in context of family, culture & community • Respect & support the role of the mother as primary caregiver • Services should be voluntary & conducted in a spirit of collaboration • Create a predictable environment that offers safety, structure & nurturance

  4. Children & DV Agencies • At first, children were “invisible victims” • Scarce resources had to be used for survival & “the basics” • Premise that helping the mother will help the child  Often true, but sometimes not • Desire to respect women’s autonomy • Services more often serve kids in shelter, not those in the community

  5. Children & DV Agencies, cont. • 50% of shelter residents are children & 80% of adults are accompanied by a child • Advocates noticed children’s suffering & unmet needs • Most DV agencies now have some type of children’s program: • In 1980, 43% had some type of children’s service, mostly child care • By 1997, 72.4% offered children’s services

  6. Barriers to Working with Children • Relocations due to safety or financial concerns  Inability to contact, lack of follow through • Concrete obstacles  Transportation, scheduling, child care, payment • Violence-related stress of parents • Children with severe difficulties may be inappropriate for a group • Lack of specialized services

  7. Potential Parent Dynamics • Inaccurate perception of child’s needs • Trauma avoidance (not want to think or talk about it) • Concerns re. confidentiality • May seek help for child first • Abuser may interfere with child’s therapy  To prevent disclosures, keep children more easily manipulated & intimidated

  8. Overcoming Barriers • Flexibility in scheduling, sliding scale for fees, transportation assistance • Clear and repeated marketing about programs, so parents understand target population, content & goals • Assist parents in assessing whether their children need services • Address parents’ feelings about effects of DV on their children

  9. Questions for Parents • What concerns, if any, do you have about your children spending time with their father? • Has your partner ever threatened to take the kids away or interfere with custody/visitation? • Has your partner ever threatened to or actually hurt your children? • Where are the children during DV incidents? How do they react? • Do you have any concerns about how your children are doing? Have you seen any significant changes in your child?

  10. Assessing Child-Related Needs • Child care, early childhood education, evaluation re. special needs • Trauma-focused therapy • Respite care  A well-deserved break! • After school / recreational programs • Financial resources, inc. child support • Health issues • Preventive care, dental care, insurance

  11. Supporting Women’s Parenting • Primary caregiver should be involved throughout intervention process • Can work with mothers to: • Talk with their children about DV • Safety plan for the family • Understand children’s trauma & impact of DV on parent-child relationship • Help their children cope • Access community resources

  12. Questions for Kids • Arguments & disagreements happen in all families. What happens in your family when adults disagree? • What do you do when your parents fight? • Do you ever see/hear fighting, or people in your family hurting each other? • Are you ever afraid that your mom or dad will get hurt, or that you will get hurt? • What was the worst fight you ever saw? • Does anyone at home hit or hurt you, or touch you in a way that makes you uncomfortable?

  13. Important Messages for Kids • “It’s not your fault” • “Violence and abuse are adults’ responsibility, not kids’” • “We will do everything we can to keep you safe” • “I believe you” • “No one deserves to be abused” • “This is a safe place to talk”

  14. Safety Planning with Children • Ages 3 and up; on their own, or w/ parent • Main goal is empowerment • Validating kids’ experiences & the ways they’ve protected themselves • Information  Increased sense of control, decreased anxiety • Can incorporate psychoed re. DV • Meet with parent first to gather info: Child’s needs & abilities, risks from abuser, mother’s safety plan, safe people & places

  15. Safety Planning, cont. • Plan should be simple, realistic & age-appropriate • Assist child in identifying: • Particular dangers & fears • Corresponding safety strategies • Ask child to ID safe people/places inside & outside home, combine with parent’s list • Discuss possible scenarios and how to utilize safety plan

  16. Safety Planning, cont. • Child can draw a picture of safe space, decorate safety plan, share it w/ parent • Role play  • Calling 911 • Using safety strategies • Important message: There’s no such thing as a “foolproof” safety plan. If someone gets hurt, it’s the abuser’s responsibility, not the child’s.

  17. DV Agency Supports for Kids • Separate intake process & shelter orientation for children • Pamphlets, books & videos for parents and children about DV • Recreational activities for kids, for moms & kids together • Partnerships with health care providers, developmental specialists, mental health providers, legal services • Tutoring & educational support

  18. DV Agency Supports, cont. • Parenting classes and/or support groups for mothers • Therapeutic child care • Designating a child advocate • Development of standards for staff who work with children • Training & support for all staff • Evaluation of programs for children

  19. Collaboration with Child Welfare • Historic barriers  Mistrust; different priorities, mandates & funding • Advocates have a lot to offer: • Understanding of DV & families’ needs • Expanding repertoire of service & safety options • Focusing attention on offender accountability • Work to develop shared mission & guiding principles for practice

  20. Models for Collaboration • DV consultants located in CPS for case consultation, accompaniment on home visits & immediate service provision • Cross-training & shadowing • Development of protocols for screening, referrals, reporting & information-sharing • DV advocates in Family Court • Joint representation on DV Coalitions, child & adult fatality review teams

  21. Mandatory Reporting & DV • Law varies by state  Advise parent up front of restrictions on confidentiality • If a report must be made, offer the option of client making the call with your support • Educate clients about the role of CPS & their response • Advocate for the family with CPS

  22. In the Community… • Community education/outreach on children’s issues • DV prevention work • Participating in/creating a children’s committee as part of DV Coalition • Support BPs in incorporating material on children & parenting into their curricula • Assist supervised visitation programs in being safe & responsive to DV

  23. Questions? Thank you!

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