Edit

Our attorneys knows this is a difficult time for you and your loved ones. We know that bills may be piling up and money is growing tight. That is why we offer a 100% FREE case evaluation to all of our daycare abuse clients. Furthermore, you don’t pay us unless you win your case!

There are some daycare abuse scenarios that are much more common than others. While the media tends to concentrate on the most sensational cases, many of the cases that are brought against daycare providers allege daycare neglect as much they do outright abuse. In fact, sometimes neglecting children can be just as dangerous to their well-being as is abuse.

Children need supervision and, when they’re at a daycare facility, there are so many children per worker that the level of supervision offered has to be particularly vigilant. Daycare workers who are properly trained and certified learn how to take care of many children at the same time, which is a completely different skill than taking care of one’s own children. In some cases, people drop their children off at the homes of friends and neighbors who run daycare operations out of their own residences. Though these individuals may be excellent caregivers for their own children, taking care of many children is quite a different task and, when they take on too many children, they sometimes end up neglecting them.

In facilities where there should be adequate resources to attend to the needs of all the children, neglect sometimes takes place nonetheless. This is sometimes because the facility is more dedicated to making a profit than it is to caring for children. In other cases, it is because one particularly bad daycare worker is allowed to stay on at the facility, resulting in a situation where the facility is negligent in that it doesn’t remove a neglectful or unqualified individual from the staff. There are plenty of cases, however, where children are abused physically and these are some of the most disturbing.

Signs of children having been beaten are sometimes discovered by doctors or parents and immediately make it apparent that there has been some sort of physical abuse going on. It’s not always obvious that that abuse took place at the daycare center and, sometimes, it might take some time to identify the abuser and where the abuse took place. After the abuse has been put to a stop, parents sometimes sue for damages so that they can recover compensation for their child’s suffering, their pain and their injuries. Recovering from abuse sometimes requires expensive medical and psychological care and parents may not have the resources to pay for these things on their own.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


4 + two =