The Cabinet for Health and Family Services (Cabinet/CHFS) is statutorily mandated to offer services to protect children from abuse, neglect, and dependency. Prevention planning is utilized to address risk factors identified during an investigation and/or during ongoing casework, as well to provide information regarding service provisions. Prevention planning is voluntary and the content of the plan should be negotiated and agreed upon with the family and all involved parties. Additionally, the plan should be specific, detailed, and practical in addressing identified risk factors. Prevention plans can be reviewed and revised as needed but must be renegotiated every thirty (30) working days if the tasks continue to be necessary and have not been included on a case plan.
A child protective services (CPS) worker who determines that a child can remain safely in the home with his or her family or caregiver, then conducts a comprehensive family assessment with the family to determine the services needed to minimize both the risk of child maltreatment and the factors that contributed to this risk.
Risk refers to the likelihood of maltreatment occurring in the future. The word risk is synonymous with words like chance, probability, or potential. An assessment of risk includes the identification of risk factors, which are family behaviors that create an environment or circumstances that increase the chance that parents or caregivers will maltreat their children. Risk factors of various degrees and seriousness may exist within a single family, and some risk factors show a stronger correlation than others for indicating the likelihood of child maltreatment.
Examples of factors that have been associated with increased risk of child maltreatment include parental substance abuse, domestic violence, and parental childhood history of abuse. Young children and children with disabilities have also been found to be at greater risk for maltreatment because of their greater dependency on others for care.