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Appendix B
Workshop Agenda
Embassy Suites Convention Center Hotel
900 10th Street, NW, Washington, DC
DAY 1, Monday, January 30, 2012
8:30-8:45 Welcome and Introductions
Anne Petersen, University of Michigan
Planning Committee Chair
Goals and Objectives of the Workshop
Bryan Samuels, Commissioner, Administration on
Children, Youth and Families, Administration for
Children and Families, U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services
8:45-9:15 Keynote Presentation:
Looking Back and Looking Forward: Reflections on
the 1993 NRC Report Understanding Child Abuse and
Neglect
Cathy Spatz Widom, John Jay College of Criminal
Justice, City University of New York
9:15-10:45 SESSION 1: Interactions Between Child Maltreat-
ment Trends and Social Trends
109
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110 CHILD MALTREATMENT RESEARCH, POLICY, AND PRACTICE
This session will explore trends and shifts in child mal-
treatment rates and the ways in which they may relate to
changes in social and economic environments.
Moderator: Anne Petersen, University of Michigan
Societal Trends and Implications for Understanding
Rates of Child Maltreatment
Christina Paxson, Princeton University
Changes in Rates of Reported Child Abuse and
Neglect
Lisa Jones, University of New Hampshire
Contributions of Data Sources to Understanding
Child Maltreatment
Andrea Sedlak, Westat
Discussion
10:45-11:00 BREAK
11:00-12:30 SESSION 2: What Have We Learned About the
Causes and Consequences of Child Maltreatment
This session will explore changes in our thinking about
the risk and protective factors that contribute to child
maltreatment, and advances in knowledge of the short-
and long-term consequences of various forms of mal-
treatment on biobehavioral processes and functions.
Moderator: Anne Petersen, University of Michigan
The Impact of Contextual Factors on Child Mal-
treatment Reports and Behaviors
Jill Korbin, Case Western Reserve University
Neurobiology of Neglect
Mary Dozier, University of Delaware (presenting)
Phil Fisher, University of Oregon (not attending)
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111
APPENDIX B
Megan Gunnar, University of Minnesota (not
attending)
Neurobiology of Trauma and Stress Associated with
Adverse Early Experience
Martin Teicher, McLean Hospital, Harvard
University
Discussion
12:30-1:30 LUNCH
1:30-3:00 SESSION 3: What Have We Learned About Preven-
tion Research and Its Impact on Practice and Policy
in Human Services and Healthcare Systems
This session will explore the evidence base for effective
prevention interventions. Speakers will discuss research
that evaluates prevention efforts for universal, selected,
and indicated populations (primary, secondary, and ter-
tiary interventions). They will also highlight outcomes
for effective preventive interventions and how to evalu-
ate and monitor performance in scaling up promising
programs.
Moderator: John Leventhal, Yale University
Assessment of Universal Preventive Interventions in
Community and Hospital Settings
Deborah Daro, Chapin Hall, University of Chicago
Assessment of Secondary Preventive Interventions
with High-Risk Populations
Frank Putnam, Cincinnati Children’s Medical Center
Assessment of Prevention of Recurrent Offenses (for
parents) or Prevention of Adverse Consequences (for
children)
Mark Chaffin, University of Oklahoma Health Sci-
ences Center
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112 CHILD MALTREATMENT RESEARCH, POLICY, AND PRACTICE
Discussion
3:00-3:15 BREAK
3:15-4:45 SESSION 4: What Have We Learned About the De-
sign and Delivery of Services?
This session will examine notable advances in
knowledge of how to design and deliver services to mal-
treated children and their families, with a focus on top-
ics that, if targeted in future research are likely to have a
substantial impact on reducing chronic abuse and ne-
glect and the negative consequences.
Moderator: Lucy Berliner, University of Washington
Parenting Interventions: Impact on Child and Family
Outcomes and Role in Child Welfare Services
John Landsverk, Rady Children’s Hospital-San Diego
Child-Focused Interventions to Address Internalizing
Problems of Children Who Experience Abuse, Expo-
sure to Violence, and Neglect
Shannon Dorsey, University of Washington
Prevention and Treatment of Child Maltreatment
Risk for Families Dealing with Multiple Problems
Steven Ondersma, Wayne State University School of
Medicine
Discussion
4:45 Closing Remarks and Adjourn
DAY 2, January 31, 2012
8:30-8:45 Opening Remarks
Anne Petersen, Planning Committee Chair
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113
APPENDIX B
8:45-10:35 SESSION 5: Emerging Issues in the Identification,
Assessment, and Reporting of Child Maltreatment
This session will explore recent trends that are influenc-
ing the ways in which child abuse and neglect are being
detected and reported by institutions and professionals.
Moderator: Richard P. Barth, University of Maryland
Child Abuse and Neglect Reporting Practices and
Patterns
Melissa Jonson-Reid, Washington University, St.
Louis
Alternative Child Welfare Services Approaches
Richard P. Barth, University of Maryland
Medical and Psychosocial Assessment and Diagnosis
of Child Abuse and Neglect
John Leventhal, Yale University
Psychosocial Assessment of Children and Families
for Service Planning
Benjamin Saunders, Medical University of South
Carolina
Discussion
10:35-10:50 BREAK
10:50-12:40 SESSION 6: Building Effective and Efficient Systems
to Respond to Child Abuse and Neglect
This session will examine cross-cutting elements in ef-
fective prevention and treatment interventions and also
review cross-cutting elements in disseminating and im-
plementing best practice models. Speakers will discuss
lessons learned from translating and scaling up promis-
ing interventions as well as the experience with advoca-
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114 CHILD MALTREATMENT RESEARCH, POLICY, AND PRACTICE
cy efforts (e.g., class-action suits) in moving research in-
to practice.
Moderator: Joy Osofsky, Louisiana State University
A Cross-National View of Child Protective Systems
of Response: Trends and Policy Implications
John Fluke, American Humane Association
Research on Evidence-Based Practice Implementa-
tion in Child Welfare Systems and Organizations
Greg Aarons, University of California, San Diego
The Role of Class-Action Law Suits in Building
Evidence-Based Systems in State Child Welfare
Agencies
Charles Sabel, Columbia University
Discussant
David Sanders, Casey Family Programs
Discussion
12:40-12:50 Final Observations on Themes
Anne Petersen, University of Michigan, Planning
Committee Chair
12:50-1:00 Closing Comments
Catherine Nolan, Director, Office on Child Abuse
and Neglect, Children’s Bureau, Administration for
Children and Families, U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services