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 Child Abuse

77% of New Hampshire Primary Voters say they would be more likely to vote for a presidential candidate whose candidate’s agenda on children includes plans to help reduce and prevent child abuse and neglect.

The Challenge

  • In 2005, there were 16,370 reported cases of child abuse, representing 5.4% of New Hampshire’s children. 
  • 941 New Hampshire children were confirmed as abused in 2005.
  • It takes an average of more than 2 days after a report of child abuse in New Hampshire for an investigation to begin, and it takes an average of 81 days between the start of an investigation to when a child receives services.
  • Child abuse and neglect contributes to numerous other social problems such as poverty, crime, and alcohol and drug abuse.
  • For every federal dollar spent on treating victims of child abuse, we spend only one penny on prevention.  A recent study showed that American taxpayers spend $258 million every single day on the direct and indirect costs of child abuse, or $1,461.66 each year by every family. However, families pay only $1.06 for prevention.
  • This places an enormous burden on the child protection agencies in the states, many of which are under-funded and understaffed.  Social workers have unreasonably high caseloads, inadequate supervision, and a serious lack of medical and legal support.  Staff turnover is staggering.

The Solutions

 

Health Care

70% of New Hampshire Primary Voters say they would be more likely to vote for a presidential candidate whose campaign’s agenda on children includes helping ensure that every child in New Hampshire and the United States has access to quality affordable health care.

The Challenge

  • 22,000 New Hampshire children (more than 5% of the child population) have no health insurance.
  • 15% of New Hampshires’s two year-olds have not been immunized.
  • 60,000 New Hampshire children (more than 17% of the child population) are covered by some type of government health care
  • Parents of many children in the NH Healthy Kids program do not have any insurance themselves.
  • Uninsured children don’t get the health care they need when they need it.  Compared to insured children, they are less likely to see a doctor and dentist regularly, less likely to be immunized, and less likely to be in good health.
  • Though the number of children without insurance had fallen in recent years, it has begun to climb again. According to the US Census, the percentage of uninsured children has risen by 58% since 2002. Beyond that, the number of children covered by private insurance has fallen, and reliance on public programs for coverage has increased. Any downturn in the state's budget outlook could mean New Hampshire will have to reduce benefits, increase family cost-sharing, change eligibility and/or implement enrollment caps for New Hampshire’s health insurance programs.

The Solutions

 

 After-School

65% of New Hampshire Primary Voters say they would be more likely to vote for a presidential candidate whose campaign’s agenda on children includes an expansion of after-school opportunities.

The Challenge

Juvenile Crime table

The Solutions

Pre-Kindergarten

61% of New Hampshire Primary Voters say they would be more likely to vote for a presidential candidate whose campaign’s agenda on children includes expanding access to and improving pre-kindergarten and kindergarten education programs.

The Challenge

The Solutions

  • Pre-Kindergarten Education Programs Lead to Better Future Educational Performance – Low-income children who attend preschool perform at higher levels than those who do not. Children attending high-quality programs had one or more of the following outcomes: lower special education rates, lower grade retention rates, higher achievement test scores, higher high school graduation rates, and higher post secondary enrollment rates.
  • Pre-Kindergarten Education Programs Help the Economy Thrive – The average benefits from a universally accessible preschool education program at ages 3 and 4 to be at least $25,000 per child, substantially more than the costs. The estimated cost- per-child (mixing half day, school day, and full day programs) is $8-$17K for two years.