| |
Unique Home Furniture, Home Decorating and Home Decoration Store
Care Child: This definition is problem-focused, emphasizing prevention and remedy. It recognizes the value of strengthening a child's own home where possible. Where this is not possible, a variety of substitute living situations is provided.
Child welfare services are directed to the social problem of deprivation of parental care child. As the accompanying chart illustrates, they are designed to help with society's child-rearing task in three important ways: (1) to substitute for parental care child either partially or wholly according to a child's individual needs; (2) to supplement the care child that a child receives, or to compensate for certain inadequacies or limitations in parental care child; and (3) to support or reinforce the ability of parents to meet their children's needs.
Service designed to substitute for natural parental care child, either partially or completely, is still the predominant child welfare service. Of the total number of children receiving child welfare services in the United States, more than half are receiving service away from their own homes and their own families.
Substitute care child programs include foster family care child, institutional care child, and adoption.
Current Need for Child Welfare. A child's need for parental care child is universal. Geographical boundaries and the attitudes of a society at a given time mark tremendous differences in the provisions made to deal with deprivation of parental care child, but need for parental care child does not change. Neither does need for the favorable economic conditions, nor for the social supports that permit and sustain good parental functioning.
|
|
|
 |
Child-Education-Usa.com |
|
 |
 |
|
Menu |
|
|
| |
| |
|
|
| |
|