Eliminate child abuse and domestic violence with the knowledge of more than 450 acclaimed authors and contributors.
The STM Learning Library provides active professionals and researchers in health care, social service, legal, and law enforcement fields with a common language and satisfies their need to have information on all aspects of child maltreatment in one convenient collection. Comprised of 5,727 pages and 5,224 images, the library addresses each category of maltreatment with little overlap of information. In addition, a supplementary CD-ROM is included with each reference.
The Library of STM Learning's published works represents the latest documentation and most researched wisdom on
child protection. Far superior to competing products in the marketplace, these publications go through a rigorous peer review, and all images and content are subject to a stringent quality assurance process.
The STM Learning Library is considered encyclopedic in scope, as each title covers comprehensively one realm within the larger topics of child maltreatment and domestic violence. The links on this page will take you to individual product pages, which contain extensive information. We invite you to learn as much as you like before purchasing the STM Learning Library.
Lead Author(s) Randell Alexander is a professor of pediatrics at the University of Florida and the Morehouse School of Medicine. He currently serves as chief of the Division of Child Protection and Forensic Pediatrics and interim chief of the Division of Developmental Pediatrics at the University of Florida-Jacksonville. In addition, he is the statewide medical director of child protections teams for the Department of Health's Children's Medical Services and is part of the International Advisory Board for the National Center on Shaken Baby Syndrome. He has also served as vice chair of the US Advisory Board on
Child Abuse and Neglect, on the American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on
Child Abuse and Neglect, and the boards of the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children (APSAC) and Prevent Child Abuse America.
Dr. Alexander has served on state child death review committees in Iowa, Georgia, and Florida, and two regional child death review committees. All subjects related to child abuse are of interest to him, but his particular areas of interest are shaken baby syndrome, Munchausen syndrome by proxy, prevention, and child death review. He is an active researcher, lectures widely, and testifies frequently in major child abuse cases throughout the country.
Sharon Cooper is an adjunct professor of pediatrics at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill School of Medicine. Additionally, she is the executive director of Developmental Forensic Pediatrics, P. A., a consulting firm that provides clinical care for children with disabilities and victims of child maltreatment, and a forensic pediatrician at the Southern Regional Area Health Education Center, which provides forensic pediatric services for nine counties in North Carolina.
Dr. Cooper is a registered and certified physician within the Child Medical Evaluation Program under the auspices of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. This program provides a standardized means of evaluating child maltreatment victims, methods of documentation, peer review, and regular continued medical education via teleconference for the select physicians in the state who provide evaluations for Child Abuse and Neglect. She has published chapters on the subject of diagnosing child sexual abuse and persons with disabilities as well as sexual assault in the incarcerated population. Due to the scope of Dr. Cooper's practice, she is closely associated with the city, county, federal, and military court systems and functions as an expert witness in the areas of general, developmental, and forensic pediatrics. She also provides training for military and civilian physicians, law enforcement officers, social workers, psychologists, chaplains, attorneys, and judges who handle child maltreatment cases.
Dr. Cooper has presented in more than 100 national and international conferences in her specialized areas. She is an instructor at the Army Medical Education Department College and School, a Soldier & Family Support Branch of the Department of Preventive Health Services. This department provides multidisciplinary training for all professionals who track, treat, and identify child maltreatment cases in the Army, Navy, Air Force, and the Marine Corps. She has been an annual presenter for the Children's Hospital Hackensack Medical Center and is an educator of Internet crimes against children for the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children in Alexandria, Virginia.
Having serving 21 years of active duty at several installations in the United States and overseas, Dr. Cooper is now a retired US Army colonel. She currently sees developmental and forensic patients on a regular basis at Womack Army Medical Center at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, the largest army military installation in the world.
Dr. Cooper is a member of the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children (APSAC), the International Society for the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect (ISPCAN), the Board of Directors of the North Carolina APSAC chapter, the North Carolina chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics Subcommittee on
Child Abuse and Neglect, the North Carolina chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Children with Disabilities, and the Society of Developmental Pediatrics. She holds additional faculty positions at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland and is a Duke University affiliate.
Lori Frasier is the medical director of Medical Assessment at the Center for Safe and Healthy Families at Primary Children's Medical Center and associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Utah School of Medicine in Salt Lake City, Utah. Formerly, she was an assistant professor of Child Health and the director of the Child Protection Program and Division of General Pediatrics at the University of Missouri-Columbia. Dr. Frasier graduated from the University of Utah College of Medicine in 1995, completed her pediatric residency at the Children's Hospital and Medical Center/University of Washington in Seattle, Washington, and held a fellowship at the University of Washington's Sexual Assault Center. Dr. Frasier has authored several articles and chapters and lectured locally, regionally, and nationally on subjects related to child maltreatment.
Angelo Giardino is the medical director of Texas Children's Health Plan, a clinical associate professor of pediatrics at Baylor College of Medicine, and an attending physician for the Texas Children's Hospital's forensic pediatrics service at the Children's Assessment Center in Houston, Texas. He graduated summa cum laude from Temple University and earned his MD and PhD at the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Giardino completed his residency and fellowship training in pediatrics at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
Immediately after his fellowship training, Dr. Giardino became the assistant, and then the associate, medical director at Health Partners of Philadelphia, where he had primary responsibility for utilization management, intensive case management, and health care data analysis. He also shared responsibility for the plan's quality improvement program. In that role, Dr. Giardino led "Little Partners," a lay home visiting program focused on fostering enhanced prenatal care and improved healthier birth outcomes. Additionally, Dr. Giardino began the
Child Abuse and Neglect Team for Children with Special Health Care Needs, which was funded by a three-year grant from a local philanthropy. In 1998, he was appointed associate chair of clinical operations in the Department of Pediatrics at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP), and in June of 1999 he was asked to chair the CHOP Quality Committee. As chair, Dr. Giardino supervised quality improvement, accreditation, and outcomes management for a wide variety of clinical programs within the hospital. He also served as an attending physician on CHOP's Suspected Child Abuse and Neglect (SCAN) team. These accomplishments are only a few of his career.
Dr. Giardino is a fellow of the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Texas Pediatric Society, and the Harris County Medical Society, where he serves on the Managed Medicaid Forum and the Medical Directors Committee. He is 10-year member of the American College of Physician Executives and a member of the American College of Medical Quality. Prior to relocating to Houston, Dr. Giardino served as chair of the Philadelphia Branch Board of the Southeastern Chapter of the American Red Cross, president of the Board for Bethany Christian Services in Fort Washington, Pennsylvania, and a member of the Board for the Support Center for Child Advocates, where he was named a 2005 Champion for Children. His academic accomplishments include publishing eight textbooks on child abuse and neglect, presenting on a variety of pediatric topics at national and regional conferences, and, most recently, being appointed to a three-year term on the National Review Board for the US Conference of Catholic Bishops.
Barbara Girardin earned her PhD in nursing from Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. Currently employed as a forensic nurse, trainer, and grant writer by the Healing Hearts Rape Crisis Center in Tamuning, Guam, she has 31 years of clinical practice experience in the acute and critical care of adolescents and adults, with eight years of clinical practice in forensic nursing, conducting acute sexual assault exams, developing policies and standards of practice, and receiving funding for federal grants.
Dr. Girardin served as a consultant for the Sexual Assault Response Team (SART), Guam and at Naval Hospital, Guam, where she teaches the sexual assault advocate program at the Family Service Center. She authors a newsletter column titled "Research Briefs in Forensic Nursing" for the International Association of Forensic Nurses. She has also conducted community education programs for more than 500 middle and high school students, parents, and military commands on the topic of sexual assault. Dr. Girardin has served and is available as an expert forensic witness in sexual assault cases.
Product Details
Click the links below to read details about each of the five publications that comprise the current STM Learning Library
Not included in the current STM Learning Library are these four forthcoming publications. If you wish to purchase these titles when they become available, you are guaranteed the same discount that is offered for the current STM Learning Library:
> Intimate Partner Violence
> Investigation of Child Maltreatment
> Mental Health Issues of Abuse
> Missing, Abducted, and After
Information on these and other titles will be posted in the coming weeks.Table of Contents Click a link below to read a publication's table of contents.
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ReviewsClick the links below to read reviews of the titles that comprise the G.W. Medical Library.