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All Vermonters are Healthy and Safe and 15 more... less...

Vermont's families are safe, nurturing, stable, and supported

Vermont's families are safe, nurturing, stable and supported

Vermonters are safe, stable, nurturing, and supported

Vermonters are safe in their homes and communities

Vermont families are safe, stable, nurturing, and supported

Families are safe, stable, nurturing, and supported

Vermont families are safe, stable, nurturing, and supportive

Vermonters are safe from harm

VERMONT'S FAMILIES ARE SAFE, NURTURING, STABLE, AND SUPPORTED

Vermont families are safe, stable, nurturing, and supported

VERMONT IS A SAFE PLACE TO LIVE

VERMONT'S FAMILIES ARE SAFE, NURTURING, STABLE, AND SUPPORTED

VERMONT IS A SAFE PLACE TO LIVE

VERMONT'S FAMILIES ARE SAFE, NURTURING, STABLE, AND SUPPORTED

VERMONT'S FAMILIES ARE SAFE, NURTURING, STABLE, AND SUPPORTED

Rate per 1,000 Vermont children found to be a substantiated child victim of abuse and neglect.

Current Value

6.6 per 1,000

2022

Definition

Line Bar

Notes on Methodology

NCANDS Child Victim Count (duplicate value). Vermont child population estimates, by year, used to calculate rate per 1,000. Current reporting period uses VDH 2019 population estimates (latest available).

Last updated: September 2022

Updated by: Department for Children and Families

Story Behind the Curve

We want to reduce the incidence of child abuse and neglect as part of our efforts to ensure that all Vermonters are healthy and safe.


In Vermont, the rate of substantiated child abuse and neglect per 1,000 children has decreased from 9.0 in 2018 to 4.9 in 2020. This is due to several factors including Vermont's sustained efforts to treat the opioid epidemic, increases to Family Services staffing and the work of our community partners. Our community partners have made key investments in child abuse prevention, early childhood services, and comprehensive family supports which is also having an impact.


AHS is currently using this tool to assess our agency contribution to reducing the rate of child abuse and neglect in Vermont. One Agency cannot turn the curve alone; there are many partners who have a role to play making a difference.

Partners

Child abuse and neglect in Vermont is a population-level problem. While the Agency of Human Services (AHS) and its Departments are responsible for intervening in, and working to reduce the rate of child abuse and neglect in Vermont, AHS recognizes that preventing abuse and neglect is something many other partners contribute to.

In the Agency strategic planning process for reviewing our strategic plan population-level results and indicators, each of the partners below was identified as having a contributing role to play in improving this population-level indicator for the state of Vermont.

  • Vermonters
  • Vermont families
  • Communities
  • Agency of Human Services
    • Department for Children and Families


      • Protective Services Child Care
      • Children’s Integrated Services
      • Disability Determination (do SSI determinations for kids in custody)
      • Family Services Division
      • Family Supportive Housing
      • Medicaid
      • Reach Up
      • Strengthening Families Demonstration Project
      • Strengthening Families Child Care
      • Vermont Rental Subsidy
    • Integrated Family Services
    • Department of Mental Health
    • Vermont Department of Health
  • Local law enforcement and Special Investigation Units
  • Vermont Judiciary, attorneys, and other court personnel
  • Prevent Child Abuse Vermont
  • Parent Child Centers
  • Health Care Professionals
  • Educators and other school personnel
  • Agency of Education
  • Designated Agencies
  • Mandated reporters
  • VT-FACTS
  • VTFUTRES
  • UVM Child Welfare Training Partnership
  • Casey Family Programs
  • VFAFA
  • KIN-KAN
  • VT KIN AS PARENTS
  • What Works

    Strengthening Families™ is a research-informed approach to increase family strengths, enhance child development and reduce the likelihood of child abuse and neglect. It is based on engaging families, programs and communities in building five protective factors:

    • Increase parental resilience
    • Strengthen social connections
    • Improve knowledge of parenting and child development
    • Provide concrete support in times of need
    • Promote social and emotional competence of children

    Child abuse prevention initiatives across the Department for Children and Families and the Agency of Human Services draw on this evidence-informed approach.

    Strategy

    The deaths of Dezirae Sheldon and Peighton Geraw in 2014 caused the entire child protection system to question what could have been done to prevent these tragedies. Vermont’s Child Protection System has undergone an unprecedented number of reviews and inquiries in an attempt to answer this question.

    DCF has implemented significant improvements based on reviews conducted by Casey Family Programs and the Vermont Citizen’s Advisory Board. DCF also sought feedback from its staff, community partners, and the public to develop a plan to improve our policies and support our workforce. Implemented changes include:

    • Increased staffing capacity in the districts and in the DCF Central Office, with support from AHS, the Governor’s Office and Legislature;
    • Contracted with community partners to provide the services of six substance abuse specialists who will help social workers with investigations in which substance abuse is alleged to be a contributing factor to child abuse or neglec
    • Renewed the emphasis on child safety in the Family Services Division mission;
    • Implemented new policies requiring management consultation in cases of serious physical abuse;
    • Held a statewide conference in March 2015 for staff and partners focusing on the needs of young children and how to improve our focus on the safety and wellbeing of these young children;
    • Updated training on child safety and risk assessment in partnership with Casey Family Programs and the Children’s Research Center;
    • Introduced a comprehensive coaching program to support continual skill development for staff; and
    • Improved the DCF website to provide better information to the public about FSD policies and practices.

    Act 60 went into effect on July 1, 2015. This legislation makes several key changes possible:

    • Information sharing among professionals across the child protection system
    • Closer collaboration between DCF and Vermont’s Special Investigation Units
    • Adoption of a mandatory six-month supervisory period for children reunified to a home in which they were abused or neglected
    • Creation of a Joint Legislative Child Protection Oversight Committee

    For more information about ongoing efforts to strengthen Vermont's child protection system, please click here.

    Clear Impact Suite is an easy-to-use, web-based software platform that helps your staff collaborate with external stakeholders and community partners by utilizing the combination of data collection, performance reporting, and program planning.

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