logo
Kentucky clinic treats child abuse (and tries to prevent it)

Kentucky clinic treats child abuse (and tries to prevent it)

Yahoo28-05-2025

Dr. Christina Howard and Darcy, a therapy dog, in the Kentucky Children's Kosair For Kids Center for Safe and Healthy Children and Families on May 8, 2025 in Lexington. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Arden Barnes)
This story discusses child abuse. Report child abuse to Kentucky's Statewide Child Abuse Hotline at 1-877-597-233.
LEXINGTON — Before Kosair for Kids Center for Safe and Healthy Families was founded in 2024, Kentucky children with bruised faces or sexual trauma waited for medical care alongside those with the flu.
This was 'not trauma-informed care,' said Barry Dunn, the president and CEO of Kosair for Kids, which then put up $2 million to do something about the problem. Kosair for Kids is a Louisville-based organization that advocates for children's wellbeing.
'Do we want a child who has just experienced the worst moment of their life — who has just been sexually assaulted — being seen … beside a kid who's there because the child is running a fever?' Dunn said. 'Not to minimize the fever, but as you're talking through what happened to you being sexually or physically abused, do we really want that to happen in an ER setting?'
The obvious answer to Dunn and others was no, children facing the worst moments of their lives need personalized and private care. It also helps if there is a therapy dog whose entire job is to comfort traumatized children.
Dr. Christina Howard, a forensic pediatrician and Kentucky's leading expert on child abuse, said the sterile ER is just 'not an ideal' place for sensitive conversations about abuse.
'As a parent, if you see a kid whose face is just bruised, it's hard to look away,' she said. 'It's hard to not pay attention to that and want to do something.'
It also was not a comfortable setup for much-needed mental health services, Howard said.
The Kosair for Kids Center for Safe and Healthy Families at the University of Kentucky Hospital was built with this need for privacy and trauma-informed care for the smallest patients in mind.
Now a year old, the clinic is a model for treating abuse — and trying to prevent it.
Anyone, including parents, can bring a child to the clinic for treatment. A 'large majority' of patients are referrals from the UK Hospital, which has consulting protocols when children come in with certain injuries, Howard said.
The Department for Community Based Services, in the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, may refer children to the clinic, as well as concerned caregivers, police and other hospitals throughout the state.
The clinic has three exam rooms, including one with a shower — which sexual abuse survivors can use after a rape kit, for example — and therapy rooms. One is a 'play therapy' room for younger children.
Another therapy room is where non-offending caregivers can get mental health treatment, a much-needed component because a lot of child neglect and abuse instances aren't straightforward cases of cruelty, Howard said.
Many other factors play a role, she said — addiction and other mental health issues are key culprits, as well as child care challenges.
'We're in a world where it's really, really hard to be a parent, especially to be a single parent,' Howard said.
Child care is expensive, she said, which sometimes forces parents to leave children in suboptimal situations so they can earn a paycheck to support the family.
'It's one of those (decisions): cheap child care that might not be the safest, or work.'
Howard said parents in such situations need support, including more affordable child care.
'It's pretty much on a daily basis, where I will see a single parent asking how other parents are surviving? 'How are they putting food on the table and getting child care?'' she said.
Plentiful data backs this struggle up. A 2024 survey of 1,357 parents from 88 Kentucky counties showed that some parents had already chosen to exit the workforce because of inaccessible child care.
Many families put off having more children, delayed big purchases and sacrificed health care needs because of child care complications, the Lantern previously reported.
Child care centers closing during the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in 'fewer eyeballs on kids,' Dunn with Kosair explained. It's also difficult to get people to work in child care facilities, he said, due to the industry's low wages. An increase in wages helps with retaining good workers — but parents bear the cost.
'For some it's just unsustainable,' Dunn said. 'It's not possible to pay those rates.'
That difficult choice between work and child care puts children in jeopardy, Dunn said. A lot of abuse cases happen when a working parent has to leave their child with a boyfriend or girlfriend, he said, and the child is then harmed.
'There is a misconception out there that child abuse is perpetrated by random strangers that one has never met, and they just show up out of the blue in (an) ice cream truck or van going down the road and somebody steals the child,' he said. But 'the majority of child abuse is perpetrated by someone who knows the child. It's family, it's a friend. It's someone that you thought was safe, but it turns out they were not.'
Meanwhile, more than 85% of the clinic's patient population is enrolled in Medicaid, a program currently under federal threat of deep cuts.
Howard cannot bill parents — even if they are the perpetrators of child abuse — but she can bill Medicaid and said providers like her need an intact Medicaid reimbursement.
In Howard's Lexington office, she keeps a clear plastic tub full of gun locks and gives them out for free to people who need them. Guns remain the leading cause of death for children and teens in the United States.
'We do, unfortunately, see a lot of pediatric firearm injuries as well unintentional ones. And so if we can prevent that, then that would be the best course,' Howard said. 'Storing bullets separate from the gun, for example, always treating a gun like it's loaded, are definitely tips to have when you have young children in the home.'
Kentucky's 2024 Child Fatality and Near Fatality External Review Panel report, released in February, showed the extent of this neglect. It found that most fatalities were 'potentially preventable.'
In one case, a 1-year-old ingested fentanyl and died. In another, a 7-year-old fatally shot his 4-year-old brother while playing with a shotgun, which was loaded and kept beside the refrigerator.
'As a child abuse pediatrician: we don't want to see abuse. We want to prevent as much as we can,' Howard said. 'Unfortunately, we're just not able to prevent it.'
Still, she tries to educate guardians and parents about safe storage of guns and medicine, both culprits in hurting and killing Kentucky's children. In a state with extremely high rates of opioid use disorder (OUD) and addiction, children are too often exposed to medications that can kill them.
'We're huge advocates for parents to get medically assisted therapy, but having that in the home still is dangerous, so we do recommend safe medication storage on those,' Howard said. 'We've provided medication lock boxes and bags and recommend that for any caregiver that has something like that in the home.'
All medications should be stored safely out of reach of children, she said; 'even medicines like Tylenol can be dangerous to a child.'
UK also offers a variety of classes, including ones for new dads, Howard said. At this 'daddy boot camp,' new fathers are paired with established fathers and learn important parenting skills.
This is another way of going far upstream to prevent neglect and abuse.
'Families …. (have) a lower risk of child maltreatment if the father is involved and supportive,' Howard said.
At the Kosair clinic, most patients are 4 and younger. In many cases, they don't understand what is going on and can't — or don't want to — talk to an adult. Sometimes the trauma is too great for words.
Enter Darcy, a golden retriever raised to be a therapist.
'We actually first had the idea of a therapy dog when we had a child that unfortunately did not survive injuries; it was a homicide,' Howard said. She went to evaluate the child's siblings, who were in the emergency room.
'You walk in the room and you could feel the burden of it in there; they knew their sibling had passed away,' she recalled. 'None of the kids would make eye contact. It was just complete silence.'
A hospital volunteer brought her therapy dog into the ER, who then immediately transformed the mood.
'As soon as that dog walked in the room, one of the older girls was like, 'a dog!' And then she just completely started talking to us about school, what she does at school,' Howard recalled. 'It just made her more comfortable already, just that automatic thing.'
Howard knew she had to research the benefits of therapy dogs, especially in the child abuse field. She found plenty.
Purdue University researchers say therapy dogs help survivors of violence by providing comfort during their treatment process. The American College of Qualitative Research found that therapy dogs helped decrease anxiety in school shooting survivors.
'There is clear evidence that they are beneficial,' Howard realized after her research. 'There's kids that won't talk to anybody, but will tell a dog something.'
Using grant money from Children's Miracle Network, Howard applied for a therapy dog, who came from Ultimate Canine in Indianapolis.
Darcy came to Howard in January 2024 at 10 months old, having passed her therapy dog training and ready to work at the Kosair clinic.
Her days vary widely depending on the patient. If the patient is an infant, Darcy may focus her energy on the parents while she will climb in bed and cuddle with an older child.
There are a few times Darcy can't be in the room — when a patient is allergic or during rape kit evidence collection. Sometimes her help is quite practical — a reserved child can 'teach' Darcy how to step on a scale and get weighed or may take her for short walks.
'You always hear they're man's best friend, and I think it's because they're … not judgmental. They're just there for you,' Howard said.
In her spare time, Darcy loves to collect socks and bring them to Howard, who is one of her handlers. But she loves her job at the clinic, and starts a happy purr when Howard pulls into the parking lot in the mornings.
Each day she works, Darcy is helping kids with their anxiety and coaxing them into sharing terrible things that they've been through so they can receive proper care.
'We had a child that was just up in the pediatric ICU because she had a pretty significant injury, and she wouldn't talk to anybody,' Howard recalled. 'She'd be like, 'No, leave me alone.' So we're like, 'Well, we'll try Darcy.' And we did. She was one that was like, 'a dog!' (Darcy) got up on the bed with her, and the girl snuggled her. By the end of it, she was like, 'I love you, Darcy.''
In 2024, about 16% of Kentuckians lived in poverty, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. Nearly 17% of Kentuckians are food insecure, meaning they don't have enough to eat and may not know where their next meal will come from.
Poverty like that can blur the legal line between true neglect and a family who lacks the resources to meet middle class ideals.
For Dunn, the president and CEO of Kosair for Kids it's important to not punish people who lack resources and said the dividing line is what parents do about their lack of resources. Those who are trying to get help for their children, he said, need more support.
To protect children, Dunn said, Kentucky needs to take a serious look at environmental factors in neglect and abuse — food insecurity, child care, housing. He also wants to make sure Kentucky has enough social workers who can properly investigate every report of mistreatment.
'As much as I want to see (child abuse) end overnight, I think we are on a march toward the day where we can get those rates down to a point where it really is only the cruel, irredeemable folks who are committing child abuse, not the people who are just poor or have financial stresses,' Dunn said. 'But it's going to take a while. It won't be overnight, unfortunately.'
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Soldier Who 'Hates Himself' for Dismembering Pregnant Wife, Unborn Child with Chainsaw Learns Fate
Soldier Who 'Hates Himself' for Dismembering Pregnant Wife, Unborn Child with Chainsaw Learns Fate

Yahoo

time20 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Soldier Who 'Hates Himself' for Dismembering Pregnant Wife, Unborn Child with Chainsaw Learns Fate

Pfc Dewayne Johnson II, a former Hawaii-based U.S. Army soldier, was sentenced to 23 years in prison on June 3 after he admitted to killing his 19-year-old wife Mischa Johnson Dewayne used a machete and chainsaw to dismember Mischa and threw out her body parts in a dumpster in trash bags According to prosecutors, Dewayne had messaged 18 different women on a dating app and they found photos of him on his phone with another womanA Hawaii-based U.S. Army soldier was sentenced to 23 years in prison on June 3 after he admitted that he killed his 19-year-old wife and unborn child in the midst of a heated argument — and then dismembered her body to cover up the crime. Pfc Dewayne Johnson II, 29, pleaded guilty at a court-martial to voluntary manslaughter, obstruction of justice and providing false statements, according to a statement from the U.S. Army. He received the maximum sentence, plus a reduction in rank and a dishonorable discharge from the military. On July 12, 2024, Dewayne and his wife, Mischa Johnson, were at their home when they got into a heated argument, the Army statement said. In a military courtroom, Dewayne testified to the judge that he struck Mischa in the head with a machete that they had in their home. The machete then got stuck in Mischa's temple, Hawaii News Now reported. Dewayne eventually freed the machete from Mischa's head and tried to dismember her corpse with it. He was unsuccessful in doing so and bought a chainsaw to dismember what remained of her body. Dewayne admitted in court to severing Mischa's arms and legs from her head and torso, which he kept intact, per the local outlet. He then told the military judge that he separated Mischa's body parts into three trash bags and put them in a dumpster on the military barracks, knowing they would later be incinerated. During the June 3 sentencing, Dewayne offered an apology to Mischa's family, his own family and colleagues on his base, Hawaii News Now reported. 'My wife didn't deserve that. She wasn't trash,' he said. 'I hate myself for what I did, every day.' Mischa's remains and the remains of her unborn child have never been found, according to the statement from the U.S. Army. Both of their remains are presumed to have been transported to Hawaii's trash incinerator. 'While no amount of confinement will ever be able to truly ease the pain of the loss of Ms. Johnson and her unborn child for her family and friends, it is my hope that Pfc. Johnson's admission of guilt and the information he provided as a part of the plea agreement can provide some element of closure,' Lt. Col. Nicholas Hurd, a prosecutor for the Seventh Circuit in the U.S. Army, said in a statement. Dewayne didn't report Mischa missing to authorities until two weeks after he killed her, according to the U.S. Army statement. He even participated in community search parties across Hawaii to look for her. According to prosecutors, Dewayne had messaged 18 different women on a dating app and they found photos of him on his phone with another woman which showed him kissing and performing sexual acts on her, KTIV sister, Mariana Tapiz, spoke to Island News about how painful it was to hear about the details of how her sister was killed. 'As a family together, we're just trying not to focus on the horrific details of her last moment with him. And instead, right now, we're trying to remember the happy memories that we have and remember her in that life,' Tapiz said. If you are experiencing domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233, or go to All calls are toll-free and confidential. The hotline is available 24/7 in more than 170 languages. Read the original article on People

Two foreign nationals charged with stalking a Los Angeles artist who criticized Xi Jinping
Two foreign nationals charged with stalking a Los Angeles artist who criticized Xi Jinping

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Two foreign nationals charged with stalking a Los Angeles artist who criticized Xi Jinping

Two foreign nationals were charged with stalking a Los Angeles-based artist who has criticized Chinese President Xi Jinping, federal officials said. Cui Guanghai, 43, of China, and John Miller, 63, of the U.K. and a U.S. lawful permanent resident, were charged with interstate stalking, conspiracy to commit interstate stalking, smuggling and violating the Arms Export Control Act, according to a release from the U.S. Attorney's Office Central District of California. 'The defendants allegedly plotted to harass and interfere with an individual who criticized the actions of the People's Republic of China while exercising their constitutionally protected free speech rights within the United States of America,' said FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino in the release. 'The same individuals also are charged with trying to obtain and export sensitive U.S. military technology to China." Read more: Dating apps used in Mexico to lure and kidnap U.S. citizens, officials warn If convicted, Cui and Miller face up to five years in prison for conspiracy, five years for interstate stalking, 20 for violating the Arms Export Control Act and 10 years for smuggling. According to court documents, Cui and Miller allegedly employed two people, who they didn't know were acting on the direction of the FBI, to carry out a plot to stop someone from protesting Xi's appearance at the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit. The victim, who wasn't named in the release, had previously publicly criticized Xi and China's government. Cui and Miller had the alleged victim surveiled, had a tracking device installed on their car, slashed the tires on the car and bought and destroyed statues created by the victim showing Xi and Xi's wife, according to the release. In the spring of 2025, the victim announced that he planned to publicize an online feed showing the two statues; Cui and Miller allegedly paid two other people $36,500 to convince the victim not to display the statues, officials wrote. Those two people were also working with the FBI. Starting in November 2023, Miller and Cui allegedly procured U.S. defense articles, including air defense radar, drones, missiles and cryptographic devices in order to unlawfully export them from the U.S. to China. They talked with two other people about how to export the device, including hiding it in a blender, motor starter, small electronics or shipping it to Hong Kong. Cui and Miller allegedly paid about $10,000 as a deposit for the cryptographic device through a courier in the U.S. and wire transfer to a U.S. bank account, officials said. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Chemical company director to stand trial for Flint River oil spill
Chemical company director to stand trial for Flint River oil spill

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Chemical company director to stand trial for Flint River oil spill

Dozens marched to Flint City Hall on April 25, 2024, considered the 10th anniversary of the start of the Flint water crisis | Ken Coleman Nearly three years after a Flint-based chemical processing company released about 15,000 gallons of mixed oil and chemicals into the Flint River, the company's director is set to stand trial for his role in the release. Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel on Friday announced that Rajinder Singh Minhas, of Rochester, was bound over to stand trial in the Genesee County Circuit Court on four felony charges for allegedly mismanaging and neglecting critical maintenance and upgrades at the Lockhart Chemical Company. Minhas stands accused of four felony charges: Falsely altering a public record, punishable by up to 14 years in prison; Uttering and publishing a false or altered public record, also punishable by up to 14 years in prison; Substantial endangerment to the public, punishable by up to five years in prison; Discharge of an injurious substance to waters of the state, punishable by up to two years in prison. 'Serious violations by businesses that endanger the health and well-being of Michigan residents and our environment cannot be tolerated,' Nessel said in a statement. 'I am grateful to the talented prosecutors in my office, the dedicated experts from the Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy, Michigan State Police, the Genesee County Sheriff's Office, the Oakland County Sheriff's Office, and detectives of EGLE and [the Department of Natural Resource's] Environmental Investigation Section, who all played a significant role in advancing this case through the judicial process.' Minhas also faces several misdemeanor charges including nine violations of the state's liquid industrial waste law and 11 other offenses for violating hazardous waste statutes. A pretrial date has not been set, according to the Attorney General's office. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store