我们怎么能只谈儿童保护而不谈儿童保护呢?

Lauren Elizabeth Lines , Sarah Hunter , Amy Marshall , Tahlia Johnson , Megan Aston
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在儿童保护服务中,专业人员在描述或与儿童父母交谈时使用的语言可能带有污名化和有害。卫生、福利和儿童教育部门的专业人员经常遇到正在经历多重社会、经济和健康逆境的父母,这些逆境影响了孩子的健康、发展、福祉或人身安全。经历多重逆境的家庭往往陷入难以摆脱的不利和边缘化的代际循环。针对儿童保护的公共卫生应对措施针对那些遭遇逆境的人,并在局势升级到儿童安全受到威胁之前提供预防、早期支持和应对措施。护士、社会工作者、医生、助产士和律师是组成更广泛的卫生、福利和幼儿专业人员网络的一些专业人员,他们在儿童保护、公共卫生应对、预防和早期干预方面处于有利地位,使家庭能够消除代际劣势。整个社会以及卫生、福利和教育部门为应对遭受暴力和虐待等逆境的家庭而使用的语言可能会在不经意间进一步边缘化这些家庭,降低他们寻求和接受支持的意愿。在政府政策、卫生和福利系统以及服务提供者和从业人员制定儿童保护公共卫生应对措施时,这种语言具有特别重要的影响。本文首先总结了在支持受暴力和虐待儿童影响的家庭时所使用的语言的历史和社会背景,并总结了解决可能使边缘化和耻辱永续的无益语言的策略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How can we talk about child protection without talking about child protection?
Language used by professionals when describing or speaking with parents of children within child protection services can be stigmatizing and harmful. Professionals across health, welfare and childhood education sectors frequently encounter parents who are experiencing multiple social, economic, and health adversities that impact their children's health, development, wellbeing, or physical safety. Families experiencing multiple adversities are often caught within intergenerational cycles of disadvantage and marginalisation which are difficult to escape. A public health response to child protection responds to those experiencing adversities and provides prevention, early support, and responses before situations escalate to where children's safety is under threat. Nurses, social workers, physicians, midwives, and lawyers are some examples of professionals who form the broader network of health, welfare, and early childhood professionals who are well-placed for child protection public health responses to prevention and early intervention that empowers families to disrupt intergenerational disadvantage. Language used throughout society and across health, welfare and education sectors to respond to families experiencing adversities including violence and maltreatment may inadvertently further marginalise these families and reduce their willingness to seek and accept support. This language has particularly significant consequences when used across government policy, health and welfare systems and by service providers and practitioners to enact a child protection public health response. This paper firstly summarises the historical and social context shaping the language used when supporting families impacted by violence and child maltreatment, and concludes with strategies to address unhelpful language that can perpetuate marginalisation and stigma.
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