Child abuse crosses every income level, neighborhood, and religion in America—and our systems still don’t track it honestly enough to fix it.
National studies show that about 37% of all U.S. children—and 54% of Black children—are reported to Child Protective Services by their 18th birthday. That’s millions of kids, year after year, touched by investigations, removals, and without help, a history of abuse and trauma that can shape the rest of their lives.
If we don’t measure what’s happening, we pretend it isn’t a problem—and if it isn’t a problem, there’s no discussion and no solution. This post brings together the strongest national statistics on child abuse, neglect, foster care, and fatalities in a single place so advocates, journalists, and policymakers can see the real scope of the crisis and stop looking away.
If this exploration of child protection
in America resonates with you,
don’t stop at awareness.
Share this article with your networks and
talk about it in your schools, faith communities, and civic groups.
Contact your local and state representatives to support the resources that will make CPS more effective and demand the policies that strengthen families—income supports, housing, childcare, mental health care. Volunteer and or donate to community‑based, BIPOC‑led organizations that are already doing the work of healing, advocacy, and prevention, and use whatever platform you have to insist that U.S. children deserve strong rights, strong families, and a system engineered for safety instead of harm.
KIDS AT RISK ACTION / KARA / INVISIBLE CHILDREN
#ChildAbuse #CPS #ChildWelfare #ChildProtection #FosterCare #DataMatters #KidsAtRisk #InvisibleChildren #KARA







