Virginia_Child Abuse Reporting Statute
CODE OF VIRGINIA
Title 63.2. Welfare (Social Services)
Subtitle III. Social Services Programs
Chapter 15. Child Abuse and Neglect
Article 2. Complaints
§ 63.2-1509. Physicians, nurses, teachers,
etc., to report certain injuries to children; penalty
for failure to report
A. The following persons who, in their
professional or official capacity, have reason to suspect
that a child is an abused or neglected child, shall report
the matter immediately to the local department of the
county or city wherein the child resides or wherein the
abuse or neglect is believed to have occurred or to the
Department's toll-free child abuse and neglect hotline:
1. Any person licensed to practice medicine
or any of the healing arts;
2. Any hospital resident or intern,
and any person employed in the nursing profession;
3. Any person employed as a social worker;
4. Any probation officer;
5. Any teacher or other person employed
in a public or private school, kindergarten or nursery
school;
6. Any person providing full-time or
part-time child care for pay on a regularly planned basis;
7. Any mental health professional;
8. Any law-enforcement officer or animal
control officer;
9. Any mediator eligible to receive court
referrals pursuant to § 8.01-576.8;
10. Any professional staff person, not
previously enumerated, employed by a private or state-operated
hospital, institution or facility to which children have
been committed or where children have been placed for
care and treatment;
11. Any person associated with or employed
by any private organization responsible for the care,
custody or control of children;
12. Any person who is designated a court-appointed
special advocate pursuant to Article 5 (§ 9.1-151 et seq.)
of Chapter 1 of Title 9.1;
13. Any person, over the age of 18 years,
who has received training approved by the Department of
Social Services for the purposes of recognizing and reporting
child abuse and neglect;
14. Any person employed by a local department
as defined in § 63.2-100 who determines eligibility for
public assistance; and
15. Any emergency medical services personnel
certified by the Board of Health pursuant to § 32.1-111.5,
unless such personnel immediately reports the matter directly
to the attending physician at the hospital to which the
child is transported, who shall make such report forthwith.
This subsection shall not apply to any
regular minister, priest, rabbi, imam, or duly accredited
practitioner of any religious organization or denomination
usually referred to as a church as it relates to (i) information
required by the doctrine of the religious organization
or denomination to be kept in a confidential manner or
(ii) information that would be subject to § 8.01-400 or
19.2-271.3 if offered as evidence in court.
If neither the locality in which the
child resides nor where the abuse or neglect is believed
to have occurred is known, then such report shall be made
to the local department of the county or city where the
abuse or neglect was discovered or to the Department's
toll-free child abuse and neglect hotline.
If an employee of the local department
is suspected of abusing or neglecting a child, the report
shall be made to the court of the county or city where
the abuse or neglect was discovered. Upon receipt of such
a report by the court, the judge shall assign the report
to a local department that is not the employer of the
suspected employee for investigation or family assessment.
The judge may consult with the Department in selecting
a local department to respond to the report or the complaint.
If the information is received by a
teacher, staff member, resident, intern or nurse in the
course of professional services in a hospital, school
or similar institution, such person may, in place of said
report, immediately notify the person in charge of the
institution or department, or his designee, who shall
make such report forthwith.
The initial report may be an oral report
but such report shall be reduced to writing by the child
abuse coordinator of the local department on a form prescribed
by the Board. Any person required to make the report pursuant
to this subsection shall disclose all information that
is the basis for his suspicion of abuse or neglect of
the child and, upon request, shall make available to the
child-protective services coordinator and the local department,
which is the agency of jurisdiction, any information,
records, or reports that document the basis for the report.
All persons required by this subsection to report suspected
abuse or neglect who maintain a record of a child who
is the subject of such a report shall cooperate with the
investigating agency and shall make related information,
records and reports available to the investigating agency
unless such disclosure violates the federal Family Educational
Rights and Privacy Act (20 U.S.C. § 1232g). Provision
of such information, records, and reports by a health
care provider shall not be prohibited by § 8.01-399. Criminal
investigative reports received from law-enforcement agencies
shall not be further disseminated by the investigating
agency nor shall they be subject to public disclosure.
B. For purposes of subsection A, "reason
to suspect that a child is abused or neglected" shall
include (i) a finding made by an attending physician within
seven days of a child's birth that the results of a blood
or urine test conducted within 48 hours of the birth of
the child indicate the presence of a controlled substance
not prescribed for the mother by a physician; (ii) a finding
by an attending physician made within 48 hours of a child's
birth that the child was born dependent on a controlled
substance which was not prescribed by a physician for
the mother and has demonstrated withdrawal symptoms; (iii)
a diagnosis by an attending physician made within seven
days of a child's birth that the child has an illness,
disease or condition which, to a reasonable degree of
medical certainty, is attributable to in utero exposure
to a controlled substance which was not prescribed by
a physician for the mother or the child; or (iv) a diagnosis
by an attending physician made within seven days of a
child's birth that the child has fetal alcohol syndrome
attributable to in utero exposure to alcohol. When "reason
to suspect" is based upon this subsection, such fact shall
be included in the report along with the facts relied
upon by the person making the report.
C. Any person who makes a report or provides
records or information pursuant to subsection A or who
testifies in any judicial proceeding arising from such
report, records, or information shall be immune from any
civil or criminal liability or administrative penalty
or sanction on account of such report, records, information,
or testimony, unless such person acted in bad faith or
with malicious purpose.
D. Any person required to file a report
pursuant to this section who fails to do so within 72
hours of his first suspicion of child abuse or neglect
shall be fined not more than $500 for the first failure
and for any subsequent failures not less than $100 nor
more than $1,000.