Child neglect is when the caregiver (mother, father, babysitter, etc.) fails to care for the child’s needs. These needs include housing, food, clothing, education, and access to medical care. Research by the Child Welfare Information Gateway indicates that the influence of neglect is often immediately noticeable in severe cases. Most effects go unobserved for years. “Neglect becomes more obvious as the child ages and develops physically, intellectually, emotionally, and socially” (DePanfilis, 2006). There are a number of causes that provoke the consequences of neglect. One of the major influences is the child’s age and developmental stage the abuse stared. It affects the child’s self-esteem, feeling of guilt, insecurity, and trouble with performing stable relationships in adulthood. Other outcomes include health problems from lack of proper medical care such as not being immunized or not receiving necessary surgeries. Neglected children may be in poor physical health due to medical neglect or neglect of prenatal care before being born. “Diane DePanfilis, the Children’s Bureau, and the Office on Child Abuse and Neglect found that neglected children display poorer school performances overall compared to children who had never been abused” (2006). The abused children will often have issues with brain development that causes cognitive abilities. Neglected children will develop speech problems with language…