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      HUDDLE 2025 Session 2

      Case of Multigenerational CSA: Identification of Child Sexual Abuse

      This Huddle session focused on identifying the signs of CSA before a direct disclosure (noticing and addressing red flags) and around initial disclosure. In addition, the presenters focused on immediate responses to the disclosure. Discussions addressed the role of institutional policies in early identification. Public health interventions begin with prevention-focused actions that are taken at a whole-of-population level, often through already existing universal service delivery platforms where contact with families occurs (i.e. health, education and child care services), complemented by community-based actions and population-wide strategies. The latter includes information about child safety, awareness raising actions, regulations and controls, and provision of training, resources and supports – for professionals working with families, as well as direct provision of parenting skills and other supports for families themselves.

      This documentary REWIND will serve as a case study throughout the training and provide an essential foundation for discussions in the following sessions. What we would have, could have, should have done-- so we can improve on each sectors response, and the multidisciplinary, collaborative response. This innovative online training is designed for mid-career practitioners from various disciplines involved in child protection. It will provide an in-depth exploration of multigenerational child sexual abuse (CSA) within the context of culture, family, and systems of care. Participants will explore how social work, education, medical, mental health, and justice systems interact to protect and respond to children who underwent CSA, gaining a deeper understanding of their roles and impact. This practice-based, case study-driven, and multidisciplinary training will equip participants with practical tools, best practices, and a comprehensive approach to enhance their professional responses to CSA. The training will generate key takeaways both at the practical level and at the policy level.

      Play Video
      Listen to the HUDDLE Session 2 Recording
      Huddle Date:
      May 8, 2025

      Region:

      Global

      Topics:

      Child Sexual Abuse
      Collaborative Care Models
      Public Health Approach
      Multi-generational CSA
      Downloadable Resources
      HUDDLE Session 2 Presentation Slides
      HUDDLE 2025 Session 2 - Take Home Messages
      Huddle Session 2 Mentimeter Poll Results
      HUDDLE Session 2 Breakout Room Discussion Questions
      HUDDLE Session 2 Attendee Demographics
      A Vision To Zero: A Roadmap to Ending Childhood Sexual Violence
      Getting To Zero: The Evidence to End Childhood Sexual Violence
      ISPCAN Collaborative Framework Tool
      A Health and Public Health Approach to Ending Child Maltreatment
      Safe Futures Hub - Solutions Index
      What HUDDLE Participants Hope to Learn

      Powerful testimonials from attendees of Sessions 1 & 2:

      “The Huddle affirms the common challenges but also affirms the need to keep trying to expand safety, support, and protection”

      “It validated my clinical practice during the intervention sessions with children and adolescents, good learning about other countries child protection part”

      “The information presented today directly supports my work in child protection”

       

      Identification - Learning Objectives

      1. Understand the difficulty in identifying the sexual abuse of boys
      2. Understand how the public health model helps us think about the role of stigma and shame in the disclosure and treatment of child sexual abuse
      3. Understand the role of universal screenings in the identification and prevention of child sexual abuse

      Each training session will include

      • Cutting-edge knowledge
      • Best practices
      • Context informed paradigm
      • Addressing resources of each region
      • Public health approach
      • For each session, key themes and take-home messages will be framed and disseminated to the participants.

      Training Format

       Each session will be structured as follows:
      🔹 30 min. Initial presentation by experts in the field leading the session
      🔹 30 min. Small-group discussions in multidisciplinary breakout rooms
      🔹 30 min. Joint discussion to identify key takeaways in policy & practice

      Expected Outcomes

      • Encouraging participants to think differently and adopt new ideas for their region
      • Identifying gaps and opportunities for improvement in policy and practice
      • Framing key insights and take-home messages, which will be documented and disseminated

      Participants will gain insights into:

      1. How the public health model can broaden our understanding of the risk and protective environments that impact children
      2. How assessments and interventions can be positioned to leverage new and emerging findings on risk exposure and resilience
      3. How services within child protection systems can be strengthened to support families in need
      4. How services in the community can complement services within the child protection system to support vulnerable children
      5. How individual actions of the practitioner can embolden a system and lead to better outcomes for children

      Session Leaders:

      Todd headshot
      Presenter: Todd Herrenkohl PhD
      Professor, Marion Elizabeth Blue Professor of Children and Families, University of Michigan School of Social Work, USA
      TODD I. HERRENKOHL, PhD is Professor and Marion Elizabeth Blue Professor of Children and Families at the University of Michigan School of Social Work. His research focuses on the correlates and consequences of child maltreatment, risk and resiliency, and lifecourse development. His funded studies and publications examine the developmental underpinnings of violence at different points in the lifecourse and protective factors that buffer against risk exposure in children, adolescents, and adults. Dr. Herrenkohl works with international scholars, policy makers, and practitioners to increase the visibility, application, and sustainability of evidence-based programs and practices in child trauma and prevention.
      richard-krugman
      Presenter: Dick Krugman MD
      Distinguished Professor of Pediatrics, University of Colorado Department of Pediatrics, Kempe Center Colorado, USA
      Richard D. Krugman, MD, is a Distinguished Professor of Pediatrics and former Vice Chancellor for Health Affairs and Dean of the University of Colorado School of Medicine. He served as Director of the C. Henry Kempe National Center for the Prevention and Treatment of Child Abuse and Neglect from 1981-1992. Dr. Krugman is a graduate of Princeton University and earned his medical degree at New York University School of Medicine. A board-certified pediatrician, he did his internship and residency in pediatrics at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. Dr. Krugman is a member of the National Academy of Medicine and has authored over 145 original papers, chapters, editorials and thirteen books and stepped down after 15 years as Editor-in-Chief of Child Abuse and Neglect: the International Journal in 2001. He is the 2018 Co-Founder and Chair of the Board of the National Foundation to End Child Abuse and Neglect.
      Jill Korbin Headshot
      Curriculum Support: Jill Korbin PhD
      Lucy Adams Leffingwell Professor Emeritus Senior Advisor, Schubert Center for Child Studies Case Western Reserve University Distinguished Fellow, The Paul Baerwald School of Social Work and Social Welfare, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
      Jill E. Korbin (Ph.D. Anthropology, UCLA 1978) is Leffingwell Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at Case Western Reserve University and a Distinguished Fellow at The Paul Baerwald School of Social Work and Social Welfare, Hebrew University. She served on ISPCAN’s Executive Board, NRC's Panel on Research on CA/N, and ChildFund International’s Board. Korbin was an Associate Editor of Child Abuse and Neglect, and a SRCD Congressional Science Fellow. At CWRU, Korbin was Director of the Schubert Center for Child Studies and an Associate Dean of Arts and Sciences. She publishes on culture, context and neighborhood influences on child maltreatment, edited Child Abuse and Neglect: Cross-Cultural Perspectives (1981, 2018) and co-edited the Handbook of Child Well-Being (2014). Korbin and Krugman co-edited the book series Child Maltreatment: Contemporary Issues in Research and Policy that includes the Handbook of Child Maltreatment. First Edition (Korbin and Krugman, 2014) and Second Edition (Krugman and Korbin 2022).

      Session Facilitators:

      Abbie - 2024 New Headshot - Square 2
      Abbie Newman, JD, RN
      Foto Perfil Pablo Muñoz
      Pablo Munoz D.Psy
      Picture - Jordan Greenbaum
      Jordan Greenbaum, MD
      Wells,Kathryn2019-1
      Kathi Wells, MD
      Sarah Imbesi headshot SQ
      Sarah Imbesi
      Pragathi Tummala3
      Pragathi Tummala MPH

      Contributing Partners:

      מכון חרוב_לוגו חדש_אנגלית
      KC9990_1
      ZOMA_foundation_logo (003)

      Other Sessions In this Huddle Series:

      ISPCAN Huddle 2025 Logo
      HUDDLE 2025 Session 5
      Case of Multigenerational CSA: Follow Up & Resilience.
      ISPCAN Huddle 2025 Logo
      HUDDLE 2025 Session 4
      Case of Multigenerational CSA: Multidisciplinary Response
      ISPCAN Huddle 2025 Logo
      HUDDLE 2025 Session 3
      Case of Multigenerational CSA: Assessment of Child Sexual Abuse
      ISPCAN Huddle 2025 Logo
      HUDDLE 2025 Session 1
      Case of Multigenerational CSA: Introduction to the Huddle Concept & viewing of the film “REWIND