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Broken Three Times Joan Kaufman (Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine)

Broken Three Times By Joan Kaufman (Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine)

Summary

Broken Three Times is a narrative nonfiction book that chronicles one family's travails through the child welfare system. It is about broken promises, broken spirits, and the broken child welfare system that nearly broke the three individuals portrayed in the book.

Broken Three Times Summary

Broken Three Times: A Story of Child Abuse in America by Joan Kaufman (Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine)

Broken Three Times is a narrative nonfiction book that chronicles one family's travails through the child welfare system. While this is the story of one family, it typifies countless others who get lost in the system. Each chapter of the family's story provides a launching point for discussing contemporary policy and practice, while it presents scientific updates relevant for understanding risk and promoting resilience in maltreated children, and improving the child welfare system. Emerging insights from genetics and neuroscience research are also reviewed. The book begins with snapshots from the mother's abusive childhood, which sets the stage for discussing trauma-informed systems of care initiatives. These programs include efforts to train professionals on the effects of trauma, implement universal screening of trauma experiences, and disseminate evidence-based treatments to address trauma-related psychiatric problems. The book then fast-forwards to the family's first involvement with Connecticut protective services when the children are eleven and ten. After a brief investigation, the family's case is closed, and despite their many needs, the family is not provided links to any ongoing supportive services. This chapter is then followed by a brief discussion of differential response programs. Like many unconfirmed cases, the family is re-referred to protective services within months of the initial case closing, and after a lengthy second investigation, the children are removed from their mother's care. Over the next five years we see the children pass through nearly twenty placements, while their mother continually relapses on crack and moves from one violent relationship to the next. The prevalence of substance abuse and domestic violence problems in families referred to protective services are also reviewed, together with a range of other issues relevant to improving the child welfare system and the outcomes of the children it serves. Over the course of the decade that is covered in the book's primary narrative, the child welfare system has started a process of significant reform. Trauma-informed systems of care, differential response teams, and strengthening of community-based mental health and addiction services are just a few trends that have begun to transform the system and improve the trajectory of children entering care in many jurisdictions. Judgment is still out on whether these changes will last and will prove effective, but stories like the one that forms the heart of Broken Three Times us of the complexity of the issues involved with child welfare. This book will hopefully provide readers with some ideas about concrete steps to take to improve practice, gaps in our knowledge, and a deepening appreciation of the value of incorporating broad perspectives into this work - from neurobiology to social policy.

Broken Three Times Reviews

While this book reads like fiction, the story is all too typical of the experience of families in the Nation's child welfare system. Summaries in each chapter on what we know, or don't know about ways to address the results of trauma are invaluable for anyone working in child welfare. This is essential reading for anyone engaged in child welfare advocacy, policy or systems reform. --Carole Shauffer, JD, MEd, Senior Director, Strategic Initiatives, Youth Law Center Kaufman seamlessly links her authentic, compelling, and riveting case history of one family's journey through the US child welfare system to the underlying research in neuroscience, epidemiology, and evidence-based practice. I highly recommend this powerful clinical, scientific, and policy page-turner to all concerned with improving services for children and families who have experienced trauma. --John A. Fairbank, Ph.D., Co-Director, UCLA-Duke University National Center for Child Traumatic Stress, Professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University, Durham, NC USA This is a remarkable story, told masterfully by one of the world's leading researchers on childhood trauma. Sadly, it is not remarkable because it is unusual, but because Kaufman so compellingly conveys the tragic consequences of addiction, and our ineffective efforts to protect maltreated children through a deeply moving portrait of intergenerational trauma. It is at once a compassionate but searing account of one family's pain, a guide to the scientific questions that emanate from maltreatment, and a consideration of some policies that might make a difference. I consider it nothing less than an urgent call for reform on a national scale. --Charles H. Zeanah, Mary Peters Sellars Polchow Chair in Psychiatry, Tulane University

About Joan Kaufman (Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine)

Joan Kaufman, PhD, is a clinical psychologist and Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Yale University School of Medicine. She is also Director of the Child and Adolescent Research and Education (CARE) Program and Director of the Child Welfare Unit of the Zigler Center for Child Development and Social Policy.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents: Prologue Chapter 1: The Snoopy Snow Cone Machine: 1975 Chapter 2: The First Investigation: 2000 Chapter 3: The Second Investigation: 2001 Chapter 4: After the Children's First Placement: 2 Days in out-of-home care Chapter 5: The Children's Second Placement: 3 Days in out-of-home care Chapter 6: Living with the Olsens: 59 Days in out-of-home care Chapter 7: Five Placements in Five Weeks: 291 Days in out-of-home care Chapter 8: Looking for a Home without a Dog that Bites: 399 in out-of-home care Chapter 9: An Inch from Death: 448 Days in out-of-home care Chapter 10: Without a Family: 571 Days in out-of-home care Chapter 11: No More Goody Two Shoes: 1,148 Days in out-of-home care Chapter 12: Turning Eighteen: 1,614 Days in out-of-home care Chapter 13: Epilogue Chapter 14: Lessons Learned

Additional information

NPB9780199399154
9780199399154
0199399158
Broken Three Times: A Story of Child Abuse in America by Joan Kaufman (Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
20160407
160
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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