Domestic violence and child abuse often occur within the same family and are related to the outcome of members of all families and larger communities. Children who are victims of domestic violence are more vulnerable to drug abuse, teenage pregnancy and criminal behavior than children of non-violent families. Many studies point out that violent family children show more aggressive behaviors such as bullying and are likely to participate in combat three times. Studies show that prevention and early intervention can effectively reduce domestic violence and child abuse. This section contains information for prevention and early intervention to reduce domestic violence and child abuse in the home. It also includes resources for youth date violence prevention.
Provide various materials to support the capacity of local agencies to build primary prevention efforts
Describe the implementation of the Delta Focus program at the national, state and local levels. The focus of the program is to address the social structure that leads to intimate partner violence, as well as personal and human factors.
Provide a special collection of articles on prevention of intimate violence with partners, such as setting up credits to support survivors' economic abuses and prevent violence in adolescence.
Emphasize domestic resources and publications designed to end close violence with partners defined as physical, sexual or psychological harm of current or former partner or spouse
Prevention and intervention include ways to prevent domestic violence by providing safe shelter, crisis intervention, supportive and educational and preventive programs. In the case of animal abuse, medical institutions, emergency departments, behavioral medical institutions, and court systems, the checking of regional violence may become more systematic. Tools for promoting domestic violence examination such as mobile applications are being developed. Duluth model or domestic abuse intervention program is a program to reduce domestic violence against women and is the first interdisciplinary project to deal with domestic violence through coordinated actions by various agencies dealing with domestic conflict . program
The main purpose of domestic violence risk assessment is to prevent future domestic violence. In order to prevent future domestic violence, service providers need to determine the risks of domestic violence that the perpetrator could cause and the measures to take to mitigate the risk of domestic violence. Domestic violence risk assessment and domestic violence risk management are closely related. If you are not planning to manage the risks that make up it, it will be meaningless to evaluate that risk and you will not be able to manage the risk if you do not evaluate the risks that make up it. Therefore, risk assessment considers factors that may increase the likelihood of committing the risks he presents, the current situation, and violent behavior, rather than predicting whether the perpetrator commits a crime .
Domestic violence screening is the process of identifying the warning sign of domestic violence. This process is important for assessing and managing the risk of domestic violence. By properly identifying the warning signs, risks can be assessed and dealt with appropriately in the presence of risks, but missing the identification warning signs will result in loss of protection against domestic violence and potential victims / It will be an opportunity to protect survivors. Neighborhood people, friends, families, and the "Our Business" website contain warning signs for neighbors, friends, family and workplaces. Warning signs of domestic violence that the victim / survivor may indicate are as follows.