L ike most New Jerseyans, I was horrified to learn of the Paterson mother who stabbed her 6 month-old infant to death. While it’s unimaginable to comprehend the choice to harm a child, I found myself plagued with uneasy questions about how the tragedy came to be.
Was the teen mother — pregnant at 17 while she herself was still a child — overwhelmed by the baby’s needs? Could postpartum depression have been a silent factor in what she was feeling? Substance abuse? Was the infant forever colicky and did she snap out of control with no one else to turn to?
While I may never know the details of the lives that ended in such violence, there are a few things I do know for sure.
Taking care of a baby means devoting every bit of patience, time, emotion and physical strength to feeding, changing, grooming, teaching and consoling another human being for all of one’s breathing moments.
Raising a child is the toughest job anyone will ever have. It’s also a job that comes with no preparation and often, very little support. Ensuring that families can protect and nurture their children must be a priority before it becomes so painfully obvious that we are failing them.
Child abuse can be prevented. Decades of research and experience have demonstrated home visitation programs as an effective way to prevent child abuse and strengthen families. These programs work with parents to help them nurture their children right from the start.
Home visitors reach out to families prenatally or around the time of birth to ensure that moms and dads are prepared to care for a newborn and manage the responsibilities of parenting — for the immediate and longterm future. We offer a network of home visitation services through the Healthy Families and Parents As Teachers programs across the state.
Other child abuse prevention programs, like parenting classes or parent support groups, offer education around child development while decreasing the isolation and frustration that many mothers and fathers experience.
Some prevention programs target specific groups of parents — like teenage mothers — by offering life skills and child development classes while also providing child care so the mother can finish high school while learning to be the best mom she can be for her baby. New Jersey offers a highly recognized program, the Parent Linking Project, to offer such support in high schools around the state.
The well-being of a child is a shared responsibility. It is time we all take responsibility to recognize that not only do parents need some help — but New Jersey’s children need advocates.
You can make a difference by visiting www.preventchildabusenj. org or by calling us at 1- 800-CHILDREN.
Debra Vizzi
Chief Executive Officer Prevent Child Abuse — New
Jersey New Brunswick