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OUR HISTORY:
In the early 1980’s, an alarming number of children in
the St. Louis metropolitan area sustained catastrophic or
fatal injuries at the hands of their parents or
caregivers. Many of these children and their families were
not known to existing child abuse treatment agencies.
Concerned community leaders convened a forum to consider
new, constructive interventions to address the problem of
serious child maltreatment.
At the time, no existing agency was providing preventive
services specifically targeted for potential child abuse
and neglect. No administrative structure was in place to
help community groups generate proposals or develop new
ideas. Information about the array, location and levels of
services available to victims was difficult to obtain. The
group’s initial directives, then, were to acquire and
catalogue information about available services for abused
and neglected victims and to provide a structure that
could support new community efforts to combat child
maltreatment. Thus, Family Support Network was formed.
Incorporation as a nonprofit agency occurred in January
1982, with the intent that Family Support Network would act as a catalyst for
the development of new services, especially preventive
programs, and that it would facilitate the growth and
delivery of existing services. The first Board of
Directors was drawn from those who participated in the
initial group discussion and represented the human
services as well as the volunteer community. Subsequent
members of the Board of Directors brought specific skills
in the areas of fundraising, public relations, personnel
administration, finance, legislative advocacy, and
marketing.
In 1983, Family Support Network received funding from the
U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services, Human Development Services, and
the National Center for Child Abuse and Neglect, to
conduct a child fatality study. To conduct the study, Family
Support Network
created a community-based Board of Inquiry to review all
available information about fatal or near-fatal cases of
child maltreatment. Their results indicated that over half
of the fatal or near-fatal injuries to children were
either preventable or had risk factors which could have
been detected. The Board concluded that a targeted
prevention program could easily be highly cost effective
if it reached the right group of families.
In 1985, Family Support Network developed and implemented Project
First Step, a home-based individual and family therapy,
parenting education, resource acquisition and follow-up
program targeted at families identified as at risk for
child abuse or neglect. Since that time, Family Support
Network has
continued to grow its programs and services including
expanding their cost-free counseling to parents that are
not at a high risk of abusing or neglecting their children
but just need some parental assistance while continuing to
serve the high-risk parents and caregivers. Since 1982,
Family Support Network has grown to
answer the surrounding community's needs.
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