University of Tennessee Report Quantifies the Staggering Costs of Child Abuse

June 26, 2023 K.O. Herston 0 Comments

This article by Anita Wadhwani at the Tennessee Lookout will be of interest to my readers.

University of Tennessee Report Quantifies the Staggering Costs of Child Abuse

A new report attempts to tally the staggering economic costs of child abuse and neglect in Tennessee, where an estimated one in eight children will have been found to suffer abuse or neglect by the time they reach the age of 18.

Child abuse costs the state between $3 and $5 billion each year, a tab picked up in large part by Tennessee taxpayers who foot the bill in increased healthcare costs, special education services, child welfare, juvenile justice and other publicly funded programs for survivors, the report from the  Boyd Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Tennessee and the Tennessee Second Look Commission said.

The toll of abuse can follow a victim throughout adulthood, costs that continue to be borne by communities in child abuse survivors’ lost wages and productivity, premature deaths and criminal justice involvement, the report said. That cost for a single survivor of substantiated child abuse, the report estimated, could amount to $285,000.

For children who don’t survive their abuse — and an average of 22 children each year in Tennessee do not, according to the report — the young lives lost represent a nearly $38 million economic loss.

“This gives us a price tag on maintaining the status quo,” said Kylie Graves, director of the Tennessee Second Look Commission, which reviews child abuse cases in order to deliver data and policy recommendations to the state legislature.

The report, conducted using standard economic projections and state budget information, does not include specific recommendations.

But Graves said she hopes the startling figures it has produced will bolster arguments for increased investments in a broad range of public supports and interventions that include, but go beyond, the $1.35 billion budget for the Department of Children’s Services, which spends its combination of federal and state dollars largely on foster care, crisis intervention and supports for a family after there has already been abuse allegations.

The report’s findings underscore arguments for the need to strengthen the financial stability of Tennessee families through access to government programs such as TANF (which provides cash support), SNAP, (which offers food vouchers), WIC, (supporting newborns) and continued use of the childcare tax credit, Graves said. Other investments in prevention can include home visits to families welcoming newborns and enlisting or requiring the business community to provide paid family leave.

“By nature, obviously when we talk about abuse and neglect, peoples’ minds default to the Department of Children’s Services.” But, she said, “we need to strengthen economic supports.”

The report considered only substantiated cases of abuse and neglect — those that rose to the attention of child welfare officials. The findings, the report notes, are likely to underestimate the true costs.

The full report can be found here.

Source: University of Tennessee Report Quantifies the Staggering Costs of Child Abuse  (Tennessee Lookout, June 8, 2023).

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University of Tennessee Report Quantifies the Staggering Costs of Child Abuse was last modified: June 17th, 2023 by K.O. Herston

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