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- Jan 10, 2011
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You said it. I would think that CPS is not allowed to assume that a bruise always screams abuse, but circumstances ought to at least raise a little red flag at a scene like this one. The mom is passed out??? Maybe the flag faded too soon. SMH
In every job or position I have ever had, my manager has commended me when would get more experienced in doing whatever -- better knowledge going in/a better "product" going out. Surely that is the same with CPS work, be it interviewing a teacher in the child's school, the child's doctor/dentist; a neighbor or baby-sitter; a relative, etc. Learning to recognize malnutrition, fear in a child's face, burn wounds or bruises in the wrong places, the child's interaction with parents or siblings, etc., etc., etc. Experience -- that spidey sense, etc.
And I'm sure there are many darn good CPS investigators and managers out there -- those are the ones that can mean the difference in life or death in cases like this. SMH.
That is all true and I agree with you.
But the very sad truth is, according to my ex social worker friend, there is NO PLACE to send the children that need to be rescued. My friend would very often end her case reports with the conclusion that the child should be immediately removed from the home. But the inescapable problem is that it is not her final decision.
Her reports are reviewed , and reviewed again, up the chain of command. And the people at the top have a very difficult situation. There are not enough 'beds' for the number of children that need to be taken from their homes. There are not enough foster homes, not enough group homes, and so there is no place to transfer these children to.
So when a social worker has the spider sense that tells her the bruises are not from the family dog, and the child does look malnourished----once the people at the top get the report, they send it back with their 'suggestions' of how to alleviate the issues.
Check with the family and look at their kitchen, give them more for stamps, tell them where the food bank is, have them remove the dog if necessary, etc etc.
That is why so many dedicated social workers burn out so early. It is depressing and devastating for them too, imo.