Dominic Carter: Child Sexual Abuse Prevention — FAQs
Child Sexual Abuse Prevention: Frequently Asked Questions
Note: Guidance here is general. In emergencies, call local authorities. For confidential support in the U.S., contact a national hotline (e.g., RAINN).
Q1) Why does Dominic Carter speak about child sexual abuse prevention?
A: As a survivor and journalist, Dominic believes silence protects offenders, not children. He uses his platform to equip families, schools, and organizations with practical tools to prevent harm and support healing.
Q2) What are common signs a child may be at risk or struggling?
A: Warning signs can include sudden behavior changes, anxiety around specific people, regression, unexplained gifts, secrecy, or boundary-testing by an adult. No single sign proves abuse; patterns matter. If you’re concerned, document specifics and consult trained professionals.
Q3) What is “grooming,” and how can we interrupt it?
A: Grooming is a gradual process offenders use to gain access and silence: special attention, favors, isolating the child, blurring rules, and pressuring for secrecy. Interrupt it with transparent supervision, two-adult rules, no secrets with kids, and clear reporting pathways.
Q4) How should an adult respond to a disclosure?
A: Stay calm, listen, and say: “Thank you for telling me. I believe you.” Ensure safety, avoid leading questions, and contact the appropriate authorities per your local law and organizational policy. Arrange medical/therapeutic support and maintain the child’s privacy.
Q5) Who is legally required to report suspected abuse?
A: Mandated reporting varies by jurisdiction and role (educators, clinicians, etc.). When in doubt, consult your state/country guidelines or contact a child advocacy center or hotline for direction. Reporting in good faith is protected in many places.
Q6) What immediate steps can families take to reduce risk?
A: Teach body safety, use anatomically correct terms, rehearse safe/unsafe scenarios, set no-secrets rules, screen caregivers/volunteers, and keep communication open. Create simple scripts kids can use to decline touch and seek help.
Q7) How do organizations build a “safety culture”?
A: Use written policies, background checks aligned with law, two-adult rules, open-door settings, ongoing training, documented incident reporting, and leadership that models accountability. Publish your reporting protocol so families know the process.
Q8) How can communities support survivors long-term?
A: Offer trauma-informed counseling, peer support, school accommodations, and practical help for families. Avoid shame-based language. Celebrate milestones in recovery and respect the survivor’s control over their story.
Q9) What does Dominic’s keynote/training cover?
A: Content is customized, typically including grooming awareness, risk-reduction policies, survivor-support basics, and implementation checklists. Formats: 45–60 minute keynotes; 90–120 minute workshops; half-day intensives; virtual options.
Q10) How do we book Dominic?
A: Contact Dominic at Dominic.cartertv@gmail.com with date, venue, audience size, objectives, and preferred format. Media kits, headshots, and bio will be available. Request a planning call.
Q11) Can Dominic tailor talks for schools, faith groups, or agencies?
A: Yes. Programs are adapted for parents, educators, youth-serving staff, faith leaders, law enforcement, and multidisciplinary teams. Breakout sessions and Q&A can be added.
Q12) Where can we find immediate help and training?
A: Contact your local child advocacy center or a national hotline (e.g., RAINN in the U.S.). Many offer training, crisis response, and survivor services. For organizational policy templates, consult your state coalition or national child protection networks.
Q13) How does Dominic’s media work fit into this mission?
A: On The Dominic Carter Show (770 AM WABC), Dominic elevates prevention and survivor issues alongside current events, connecting listeners with resources and real-world actions.
Show schedule:
Weekdays: 3PM & 12AM ET
Sundays: 11PM–1AM ET
Listen: On air, WABCRadio.com, or the 77 WABC app.
Q14) Where can we learn more about Dominic’s story?
A: Read No Momma’s Boy at DominicCarterOnline.com for the full journey from trauma to advocacy and resilience.
Calls to Action
Book Dominic to Speak
Order “No Momma’s Boy”
Listen on 77 WABC
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