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April is Child Abuse Awareness Month and in Charlotte, North Carolina, over twenty agencies are cooperating to bring child abuse and neglect education and awareness to the community.
How Can You Help?
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Volunteer
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Lend a hand to a family or friend in need
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Spend time with your family and children
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Find ways to help families thrive
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Donate to child abuse prevention programs
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Be a nurturing parent
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Get involved – advocate for services that help families
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Ask for help
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Community members will be encouraged to participate in activities to increase awareness and educate themselves on the facts of this horrible crime. In addition, blue ribbons will be worn in remembrance of the more than 100,000 children reported as abused in North Carolina each year.
Child Abuse Awareness and Prevention Month April 2009
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April 1 Congregations for Kids Annual Luncheon Grace Covenant Church 17301 Statesville Rd. 11:00am-12:30pm Cornelius, NC 28031
April 4 Child Abuse Awareness Event Information Booth 10:30am-12:00pm Frazier Park See photos of the event! Watch a video
April 18 Healthy Kids Day Information Booth 10:00am-1:00pm YMCA McCrorey Branch 3801 Beatties Ford Road Charlotte, NC 28216
April 19 Presentation & Information Session 8:00am & 10:30am Services Greater Galilee Baptist Church
April 22 Presentation & Information Session 6:30pm-7:30pm Mecklenburg Community Church 8335 Browne Road Charlotte, NC 28269
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April 23 Presentation & Information Session Calvary Church 5801 Pineville-Matthews Charlotte, NC 28226
April 26 Appeal & Information Booth Mt. Camel Baptist Church 8:00am – 1:00pm 7327 Tuckaseegee Rd. Charlotte, NC 28214
April 28 Orientation 6:30pm – 8:30pm Charlotte East 5800 Executive Center Dr. Charlotte, NC 28212
April 29 Presentation & Information Session Greater Galilee Baptist Church 501 West Park Ave. Charlotte, NC 28203
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Key Points
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Neglect is the most common form of maltreatment, but it receives far less attention than other forms of abuse.
- Children younger than 4 years are at greatest risk of severe injury or death.
- Child abuse occurs in all ethnicities, cultures, education levels, and socioeconomic divisions of society.
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the emotional pain and trauma suffered by children who are abused and neglected often troubles them throughout their lives
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Data
- Between July 1, 2007 and June 30, 2008
- 120,535 children were reported as being abused or neglected in North Carolina
- 8,614 new child abuse and neglect cases were launched in Mecklenburg County
- 372 children were taken into Mecklenburg County DSS custody
- In 2007, 25 children died at the hand of a parent or caregiver in North Carolina.
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The Mecklenburg County Child Abuse Awareness Month Coalition is asking the community to take action for children by embracing the theme of "Paint the Town Blue"
This year's CAAM activities are brought to you by Mecklenburg County's Child Abuse Awareness Coalition, a group of local agencies partnering to prevent child abuse on behalf of the children of our community.
The 2009 CAAM Coalition Members are: A Child's Place, CMC Behavioral Health, Carolinas Healthcare, Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools, Child Care Resources, Children and Family Services Center, Communities in Schools, Community Health Services, Community Link, Council for Children's Rights, Customize You Magazine, Guardian Ad Litem, Mecklenburg County Department of Social Services, Presbyterian Hemby Children's Hospital, Smart Start, Teen Health Connection, The Children's Hospital @ CMC, The Family Center, Thompson Child and Family Focus, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, United Family Services, Wingate Center, Youth Homes, Inc.
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Children who are physically abused may:
* Be nervous around adults. * Be watchful, as though preparing for something bad to happen. * Have difficulty playing. * Act aggressively toward adults and other children. * Be unable to concentrate at school. * Suddenly underachieve – or overachieve – at school. * Find it difficult to trust other people and make friends. *Arrive at school too early or leave after the other children.
Children who are sexually abused may:
* Behave differently when the abuse starts. * Care less about their appearance or their health. * Talk or act sexually at too early an age. * Be secretive and stop talking about home life. * Start soiling themselves. * Be unable to sleep. * Suddenly find physical contact frightening.
Children who are neglected or emotionally abused may:
* Have difficulty learning to talk. * Find it hard to develop close relationships. * Be overly friendly with strangers. * Be unable to play imaginatively. * Think badly of themselves. * Underachieve at school.
Remember: None of these signs proves that child maltreatment is present, since any of them may be noticeable at one time or another. But when they occur repeatedly or in combination with one another, the child may be suffering abuse.
For more information visit www.preventchildabusenc.org.
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The Story Behind the Blue Ribbon!
In the spring of 1989, Bonnie Finney, a Norfolk, Virginia grandmother took a stand against child abuse when she tied a blue ribbon to the antenna of her van. It was a signal to her community of her personal commitment to involve everyone in the battle against child abuse.
This is Bonnie's voice... "I only had one child. My daughter was a beautiful little girl. We knew she had entered into a stormy marriage. We suspected heavy use of drugs, but in five years, three beautiful, healthy children had been born.
My grandson was placed in foster care for three weeks but then sent home. I ached for his dilemma. But I was not physically able to care for him and the courts seemed to believe that home was the best place for him. When my 16-month-old granddaughter was hospitalized from a severe beating - her leg broken in four places and her hand burned from the tip of her little finger to her wrist – they decided to start looking for her little brother. We learned that he had been killed, wrapped in a sheet, stuffed in a box, and dumped into the Dismal Swamp three months earlier. My efforts to understand became a plea to stop child abuse. I tied a blue ribbon on my van antenna to make people wonder. Why blue? I intend never to forget the battered, bruised bodies of my grandchildren. Blue serves as a constant reminder to me to fight for protection of our children."
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