Research has shown that a lack of accurate knowledge about child sexual development negatively affects a parent’s ability to both prevent and detect abuse. When parents don’t know what’s typical at a given developmental stage, they may either overreact to age-appropriate behavior (creating shame and confusion) or underreact to behavior that signals a real concern (missing opportunities for early intervention). The good news is that professionals can do something concrete to address it.
In the Safer Society training, Helping Caregivers Cope with Sibling Sexual Abuse, social worker Arliss Kurtz, MSW, RSW, RYT-500, draws on her clinical experience and current research to outline how professionals can help parents build the knowledge and confidence they need to respond to their children’s sexual behavior, whether it falls within the range of normal development or raises cause for concern.









