Pediatrics
January 2013, VOLUME 131 / ISSUE 1
http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/current.shtml
Monthly Feature
Children’s Rights and Community Well-Being
William J. Keenan, MD
Pediatrics 2013; 131:3-4
[No abstract]
Introductory Commentary
Why would anyone, anywhere, question the importance of protective rights for children? Why would anyone, anywhere, question the profound effect children’s rights have on community well-being? In this column, Dr Keenan describes the history and current status of children’s rights and challenges us to advocate for fuller implementation of those rights based on well-established principles that are based in good public policy and science. Clearly, children do not have the ability to make all the decisions affecting their optimal health and life success. Adults must decide how children are cared for and how we should vest authority and power to ensure that every child’s best possible outcome is achieved. Concerns should exist when policies and governmental structures become repressive and become exploitive. Children everywhere deserve to be treated as valued members in society and, when developmentally possible, participate in making life choices to their own benefit.
—Jay E. Berkelhamer, MD, FAAP