Safety
Risk
Basics
Investigation
Terms you should know
100

A behavior, condition, or circumstance that has the potential to place a child in immediate or impending danger of serious harm. 

What is a safety factor?

100

An assessment tool that is used to gather specific information about a child’s family and analyze it in order to assess the likelihood of future abuse or maltreatment of the child.

What it a Risk Assessment Profile (RAP)? 

100

A day where you make no appointments on your already existing cases.

Who is inday?

100

Schools, Daycares, Medical, Relatives, Neighbors, Law Enforcement or other parties that have regular and consistent contact with the child(ren), 

What is a collateral contact?

100

A baseline of proper care for children that all parents, regardless of lifestyle or social or economic position, must meet.

What is minimum degree of care?

200

A clearly identified set of actions, including controlling interventions, when necessary, that have been, or will be taken without delay, to protect the child(ren) from immediate or impending danger of serious harm. 

What is a safety plan?

200

Newborn has a positive toxicology for alcohol or drugs

What is an elevated risk?

200

An alternative approach to child protective services that focuses on engaging families in assessing child safety and needs, rather than conducting traditional investigations.

What is Family Assessment Response (FAR)?

200

An evaluation of safety factors to determine whether the child(ren) named in the report and any other child(ren) in the household may be in immediate danger of serious harm, and, if any child is assessed to be unsafe, undertaking immediate and appropriate interventions to protect the child(ren)

What is a preliminary safety assessment (7-day Safety)? 

200

Evidence showing the allegation is more likely true than not, the minimum necessary to indicate a report. 

What is a fair preponderance?

300

Parent exhibits behavior that seems out of touch with reality, fanatical, bizarre, and/or extremely irrational.

What is Safety Factor #5?

 (Parent(s)'/Caretaker(s)' apparent or diagnosed medical or mental health status or developmental disability negatively impacts his/her ability to supervise, protect, and/or care for the child(ren))

300

Parent/Caretaker buys food for another individual with their food stamp allotment in exchange for drugs. 

What is an example of financial mismanagement?

300

 The demographics, facts of the case and evidence collected thus far are discussed to determine next steps and a plan to keep the child(ren) safe.  

What is a planning meeting?

300

Narcotics Anonymous, senior knitting club, prayer group, Book Club, PTA, hiking club, mommy and me

What are cultural connections?

300

Activities or arrangements designed to protect a child from unsafe situations, behaviors or conditions associated with immediate danger of serious harm, and without which the unsafe situations, behaviors or conditions would still be present or would be likely to immediately return. 

What are controlling interventions?

400

Parent(s)/Caretaker(s) curses and repeatedly puts a child down. 

What is a safety factor # 10?

(Parent(s)/Caretaker(s) views, describes or acts toward the child(ren) in predominantly negative terms and/or has extremely unrealistic expectations of the child(ren))

400

Caretaker(s) has limited cognitive skills.

What is an example of risk factor?

400

1034, 255, 422

What are court ordered investigations (COI)?

400

Anytime where injuries are alleged or where the condition of the home is called into question. To corroborate children’s or adult’s stories and collect evidence. 

When should pictures be taken?

400

A tool that addresses the health and substance use disorder treatment needs of both an infant and the affected family or caregiver. It must address not only the immediate safety needs of the affected infant, but also the health and substance use disorder needs of the affected family or caregiver. It should include referrals to appropriate services that support the affected infant and family or caregivers.  

What is a Plan of Safe Care (POSC)?

500

Child(ren) exposed to large quantities of acetone for use in the production of methamphetamine. 

What is safety factor #18?

(Criminal activity in the home negatively impacts Parent(s)/Caretaker(s) ability to supervise, protect and/or care for the child(ren))

500

Twenty years ago, when the mother was 17 years old, her infant was removed from her care. Following family court involvement, her rights to that child were terminated. 

What is an elevated risk?

500

WMS, Connections, VineLink, NYS Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, Child Support

What are resources we can use to look for absent parents?

500

A contemporaneous record of CPS’s investigative, assessment, and intervention activities, and should be objective and behaviorally descriptive. The notes should support CPS’s conclusions about safety, risk, family functioning, and should clearly document the evidence that exists to substantiate allegations of child abuse or maltreatment or the lack of such evidence to support unfounding the allegations in a report.

What are progress notes?

500

An evaluation of elements that pertain to and influence a subject of the report, other persons named in the report and any other children in the household to assess the likelihood that such child(ren) named in the report or in the household will be abused or maltreated in the future.

What is a Risk Assessment?

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