https://www.nvic.org/Vaccine-Laws/state-vaccine-requirements/newjersey.aspx
New Jersey Minimum Immunization Requirements for Kindergarten
-Grade 12 Attendance
N.J.A.C. 8:57
-4 Immunization of Pupils in School
http://www.state.nj.us/health/cd/documents/k12-parents.pdfState Statutes Search
New Jersey
Making and Screening Reports of Child Abuse and Neglect
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Individual Responsibility to Report
Any person who has reasonable cause to believe that a child has been subjected to abuse or neglect shall report the same to the Division of Child Protection and Permanency by telephone or otherwise.Content of Reports
The report, where possible, shall contain:- The names and addresses of the child and the child's parent, guardian, or other person having custody
- The child's age, if known
- The nature and possible extent of injuries, including any evidence of prior injury
- Any other information that might be helpful with respect to the child abuse and the identity of the perpetrator
Reporting Suspicious Deaths
This issue is not addressed in the statutes reviewed.Reporting Substance-Exposed Infants
This issue is not addressed in the statutes reviewed.Agency Receiving the Reports
The division shall maintain, at all times, an emergency telephone service for the receipt of calls involving a report, complaint, or allegation of child abuse or neglect.Initial Screening Decisions
Upon receipt of a report, the division shall immediately take such action as shall be necessary to ensure the safety of the child and to that end may request and shall receive appropriate assistance from local and state law enforcement officials. The division shall initiate an investigation within 24 hours of receipt of the report, unless a delay is authorized based upon the request of a law enforcement official. The division also shall, within 72 hours, forward a report of such matter to the child abuse registry.In regulation: The central registry shall deem a call to be a report if it contains at least one allegation that, if true, would constitute a child being an abused or neglected child, as defined by law.
Child Protective Services (CPS) shall start the investigation of a report no later than the end of the work day or within 24 hours of the central registry determining the timeframe. Each report that meets one or more of the following criteria shall be investigated no later than the end of the work day of receipt:
- Law enforcement personnel request an immediate response.
- An immediate response will prevent the loss of evidence.
- A child has died due to abuse or neglect and a sibling remains under the care of a parent or guardian.
- A child is born drug-exposed.
- A child under age 6 is alone at the time of the report.
- A child requires medical attention at the time of the report.
- A child is being seriously physically abused at the time of the report.
Agency Conducting the Assessment/Investigation
CPS shall investigate each new report, regardless of whether or not the alleged child victim and his or her family are known to the department. CPS shall investigate each report alleging abuse or neglect on a military installation, to the extent permitted by the base commander.Each child protective investigator shall request assistance from and make every effort to coordinate investigative activities with local law enforcement when conducting an investigation and whenever:
- The child protective investigator needs personal protection.
- The nature of the report suggests it.
- There is an immediately life-threatening situation.
- Violence is occurring or is immediately threatened.
- Interviewing the alleged child victim and the alleged perpetrator
- Accessing appropriate investigative medical and psychological services
- Making timely and appropriate linkages to treatment
Assessment/Investigation Procedures
In conducting an investigation of a report containing any allegation, the child protective investigator shall:- Complete a safety assessment
- Interview, in person and individually:
- The caregiver and each adult in the home
- In cases that had been open within the previous 2 years, the worker who is the most knowledgeable about the family
- Each other child residing in the home of the alleged child victim
- The reporter and each other person identified as having knowledge of the incident or as having made an assessment of physical harm
- The alleged perpetrator
- Read and review each available prior investigation relevant to the report
- Complete a child abuse record check of each household member and each other individual regularly frequenting or living in the alleged child victim's home
- Conduct a criminal history record check to identify a paramour's record of criminal history, when the report involves a paramour
- Complete a risk assessment
- Observe the environment in which the alleged abuse or neglect occurred or that poses a threat to the child
- Obtain a medical assessment of the injury
- Assess the strengths and needs of the caregiver and the alleged child victim
- Confirm child care arrangements reported by the caregiver, when appropriate
- Interview:
- At least two collateral contacts, including school personnel, child care providers, witnesses, and community professionals who have first-hand knowledge of the alleged abuse or neglect
- Each person residing at the address of occurrence and each witness offered by the alleged perpetrator
- Each investigative law enforcement officer working on the report
- Each primary response law enforcement personnel called to the scene of the alleged abuse or neglect
- Each physician and advanced practice nurse directly involved with the treatment of the child
Timeframes for Completing Investigations
The child protective investigator shall make the finding for each report within 60 days of the report being received at the central registry, except for good cause approved by the office manager. The officer manager may grant extensions in increments of 30 days if the child protective investigator is continuing efforts to confirm credible information.Classification of Reports
For each allegation of abuse or neglect, the department shall make a finding on whether an allegation is substantiated, established, not established, or unfounded, as follows:- An allegation shall be 'substantiated' if the preponderance of evidence indicates that a child is abused or neglected and the investigation indicates the existence of any of the circumstances listed below.
- An allegation shall be 'established' if the preponderance of evidence indicates that a child is an abused or neglected child, but the act or acts committed or omitted do not warrant a finding of substantiated as defined above.
- An allegation shall be 'not established' if there is no preponderance of evidence that a child is an abused or neglected child, but evidence indicates that the child was harmed or was placed at risk of harm.
- An allegation shall be 'unfounded' if there is no preponderance of evidence indicating that a child is an abused or neglected child, and the evidence indicates that a child was not harmed or placed at risk of harm.
- The death or near death of a child as a result of abuse or neglect
- Subjection of a child to sexual activity or exposure to inappropriate sexual activity or materials
- The infliction of injury or creation of a condition requiring a child to be hospitalized or to receive significant medical attention
- Repeated instances of physical abuse committed by the perpetrator against any child
- Failure to take reasonable action to protect a child from sexual abuse or repeated instances of physical abuse under circumstances where the parent or guardian knew or should have known that such abuse was occurring
- Depriving a child of necessary care that either caused serious harm or created a substantial risk of serious harm.
Child Welfare Information Gateway is a service of the
I listened to the presentation from Dr Paul Offit last night which was arranged by the LRRC - Lakewood Resource and Referral Center. It was falsely advertised as a "conversation" but it was just Paul Offit giving his signature style used car salesman shtik. The Public was invited to pre submit questions for Dr Offit via email.
ReplyDeleteI sent in two questions prior to the conference call and naturally they were not addressed.
These are the two questions.
Question 1. Robert Kennedy Jr. has publicly called you Dr Offit, a liar for claiming that Thimerisol/Mercury in vaccines is safe despite the Burbacher 2005 study that shows it gets deposited in the brain. What is your response?
Question 2. Dr.Suzanne Humphries, Del Bigtree, Dr Andrew Wakefield and other prominent anti vaccine scientists and activists have publicly challenged you to a public debate on vaccine safety. Why are you afraid to debate them or why have you refused to debate them?
Offit tried to blow off the concerns about Thimerisol by ignoring the Burbacher study and claiming that we are all ingesting mercury in one form or another. It is precisely this point on which Robert Kennedy Jr. has called him out. The SCIENCE has shown that there is a big difference between INGESTING trace amounts of environmental mercury and INJECTING Thimerisol/Mercury containing vaccines into Children,Adults and Pregnant Women. The Mercury that you eat gets excreted. The Mercury that you inject ends up in your brain. Same thing with the various Aluminum Adjuvants used in the vaccines. In fact the SCIENCE indicates that the INJECTED ETHYL MERCURY in THIMERISOL is better able to penetrate the blood brain barrier due to its smaller molecular size Than Methyl Mercury. BOTH MERCURY and ALUMINUM are NEUROTOXIC and together work SYNERGISTICALLY to be EVEN MORE NEUROTOXIC.
SO MR UOJ, rather than calling for the arrest of parents who opt to protect their children by not vaccinating them, you should be calling for the public to demand that congress investigate the CDC as Representative Bill Posey has done. It is really Paul Offit and his fellow gangsters who deserve to be arrested for the fraud they are perpetrating.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2017/10/27/michigan-mom-jailed-over-vaccine-refusal-dont-give-my-son-more-shots/807644001/
ReplyDeleteMichigan mom jailed over vaccine refusal: Don't give my son more shots
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2017/01/11/vaccines-breaking-down-and-debunking-10-myths/96454552/
ReplyDeleteVaccines: Breaking down and debunking 10 myths
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2018/03/14/detroit-traveler-measles/425446002/
ReplyDeleteTravelers who landed in Detroit, Newark, Memphis pop up with measles
So far as of Feb. 24 this year, 13 people in seven states — Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, New York, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, and Texas — have contracted measles, the CDC has reported. On Jan. 2, an Indiana University student who later developed measles arrived on an international flight in Newark's Terminal C and departed for Indianapolis.
ReplyDeleteMany of the 188 cases reported in a 2015 outbreak were tied to an infected person who visited Disneyland. More than half of the 667 measles cases reported in 2014 occurred in unvaccinated Amish communities in Ohio.
“This case underscores the importance of following vaccine recommendations and being up-to-date on vaccines,” said Dr. Eden Wells, the Michigan health department's chief medical executive. “Immunizations are the best way to protect our families and communities from the harmful, sometimes deadly consequences of vaccine-preventable diseases like measles."
Robert Allen reports for the Detroit Free Press; Susanne Cervenka reports for the Asbury Park (N.J.) Press. Follow Allen and Cervenka on Twitter: @rallenMI and @scervenka