This book focuses on the deaths of children in the U.S. due to
maltreatment. In 2010 1,560 children died from maltreatment in the U.S.
In spite of increased attention to child maltreatment fatalities (CMFs),
through research, better identification, prevention efforts, and policy,
the CMF rate continues to grow while other forms of maltreatment have
declined or stayed steady. There are many unanswered questions about
risk factors for CMFs and we know little about the effectiveness of our
prevention efforts. This book defines CMFs and discusses the prevalence
in the U.S. and other nations over the last 30 years. It addresses the
known risk factors for victimization and perpetration: age, gender,
race, parent-child relationship, parental mental health problems, and
household composition. The book then focuses on the responses and
interventions that have been put in place in order to prevent CMFs: the
intersection of the child welfare profession and CMFs, child fatality
review teams, safe haven laws, public education campaigns, criminal
prosecution, and new, federal efforts in the U.S. to reduce CMFs in the
U.S. It ends by making a series of recommendations for researchers,
practitioners, and decision-makers.