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Helping At-Risk Parents Become Better Parents Prevents Child Abuse and
Neglect and Crime
Too many of Michigan's police chiefs, sheriffs, prosecutors, and other police
leaders are arresting or prosecuting adults who they first met as victims of child abuse and neglect.
In 2005, 30,000 Michigan children were confirmed as abused or neglected. Though most abused or neglected
children grow up to be productive adults, research shows that kids are nearly one-third more likely to
be arrested for violent crimes later in life due to the abuse they endured. The tragedy is that we can
prevent most child abuse and neglect and reduce future crime. In-home parent coaching programs have
been shown to cut child abuse and neglect in half. The programs provide a range of support to at-risk
mothers before their child is born and through the earliest years. Nurses or other trained professionals
help parents manage stress, understand newborn health and nutrition needs, identify early warning signs,
make their home child-safe, teach practical steps to avoid hurting their kids and more. The program also
saves as much as $4 for every $1 dollar invested. Yet, due to underfunding, only a fraction of Michigan's
at-risk families are being helped. Over the last five years, funding for the 0 to 3 Secondary Prevention
Program has been reduced from $7.75 million to $4.774 million, coinciding with an increase in child abuse
and neglect.
Fight Crime: Invest in Kids Michigan calls on Congress to:
Reports
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"We discovered that this poor little kid had been beaten and punched
so hard it left the imprint of knuckles of a hand on his stomach...It came out at the trial that
his (the abuser's) grandmother beat him. It's sad that nobody intervened to help him and he turned
out to be a predator. By no means does every child who is abused grow up to be a criminal. But there
is a common denominator among many offenders we see; they have been neglected or abused early in life
and they act out that way. If we can prevent child abuse, we can break that cycle.”
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| Fight Crime: Invest in Kids Michigan |
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