The DSWD Reception and Study Center for Children (RSCC) is a 24-hour facility that provides temporary shelter, basic needs, and psycho-social interventions to abandoned, neglected, or abused children aged 0-6 years old. It also serves as a holding area for children in conflict with the law who are awaiting court disposition and provides temporary alternative family care to them.
The RSCC has beds and is staffed by social workers, psychologists, and psychiatrists who provide services to residents. The center also has a school on site that offers basic education programs to help the children catch up on their studies.
Also Read: How to Get DSWD Travel Clearance for Minors
The RSCC is just one of the many child protection services offered by the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD). Other services include foster care, adoption, and residential care.
Contents
Overview
The children deserve to be protected from all kinds of abuse, violence, discrimination, and neglect. There are many children in the Philippines who do not have access to basic services and opportunities. This is the reason why the government has made laws and policies to ensure that all children are given a chance to live up to their full potential.
The DSWD Reception and Study Center for Children (RSCC) of the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) provides care services including temporary shelter, food, medical attention, as well as religious and psychological support to children who are victims of abuse. In this article, you will learn more about the RSCC and how they provide care services to children.
What is the DSWD Reception and Study Center for Children (RSCC)?
The Reception and Study Center for Children (RSCC) is a residential facility that operates 24/7. It offers social work services to children aged 0 to 6. The RSCC provides security and rehabilitation services to abandoned, neglected, abused, and exploited children, as well as children with special needs, including children in need of alternative family care and children at risk, through temporary residential care.
Moreover, it also provides proper and adaptable social work services and interventions to address the development and growth as well as the security and safety requirements of young children who have been abused. RSCC also works to improve the competence and efficiency of the center’s service providers and personnel in case of management via proper placement.
Benefits
- Foster Care Services – When a child’s biological parents are unable to care for them temporarily, licensed foster families provide planned substitute parental care.
- Adoption – The process of permanent placement or commitment of a child who is voluntarily abandoned to a home or family.
- Legal Guardianship – It is a socio-legal procedure that offers substitute parental care for a child and his or her assets up until the child turns the age of majority.
- Homelife Services – This aims to create a warm and inviting environment for children to feel and experience family living. It provides food, shelter, and clothing to children, as well as well-planned activities that provide a family-like opportunity to meet their physical needs. Children’s emotional, social, mental, and spiritual needs
- Health Services – It is the delivery of curative and preventive interventions with the goal of promoting health and reducing or preventing sickness and morbidity. Routine physical examinations, immunizations, growth monitoring, vitamin supplementation, deworming, environmental sanitation and health, inpatient and outpatient assistance, and physical and dental therapy are all part of the job.
- Educational Services – It is the provision of opportunities for education based on children’s capabilities and needs through non-formal and formal education, socio-cultural services, remedial classes, and activities aimed at children that have special needs.
- Psychological Services – Negligence and abuse could have long-term and serious effects on the physical, emotional, and psychological well-being of children. Children are able to cope with and overcome the effects of abusive situations and experiences through the provision of psychological services. It entails administering psychological tests to children in order to assess their intellectual and personality build-up, which serves as the fundamental foundation for developing a suitable care plan or therapeutic initiative.
Qualifications
The RSCC serves children aged 0 to 6 years old. Listed below are the following categories:
- Dependent Children – Children whose parents cannot take care of them for a temporary period and have no relatives to rely on are considered orphans.
- Abandoned or Neglected Children – Refers to children who have been abandoned by their parents and placed with private individuals or organizations such as clinics, hospitals, or placement agencies or duly signed child caring.
- Foundling – refers to children who have been abandoned in the streets or other private or public places. These children are being physically abused. There are moral, well-being, and environmental risks and dangers on the streets.
- Physically Abused – refers to children who have been battered, physically abused, or verbally abused by their own family members, neighbors, guardians, or other people in the environment
- Sexually Abused –refers to children that have been enticed, induced, employed, or coerced into sexual activity, lascivious behavior, prostitution, molestation, or incestuous relationships.
- Voluntary Committed or Surrendered – refers to young people who are willingly given up by their families for personal and financial reasons such as having a baby out of wedlock, not having enough money to support the child, or having a child as a consequence of rape.
- Transnationals – are children aged 0 to 6 born in a relationship between a foreign national and a Filipino.
- Orphaned Children – They are children that don’t have family members or relatives who can take care of them.
Requirements
These are the documentary requirements needed for admission:
- Referral Letter
- Birth Certificate
- Case Summary
- Medical Abstract or Certificate
- Medico-Legal- if sexually or physically abused
- If the child is abandoned or a foundling, police or Barangay blotter and referring party or affidavit of the finder.
Video: Reception and Study Center for Children (RSCC)
Here is a video regarding the Reception and Study Center for Children (RSCC).
In the video, the programs, services, and initiatives offered by the Department of Social Welfare and Development were discussed. This includes the Reception and Study Center for Children (RSCC), a special facility that provides care, protection, and support for children who have been abused or neglected.
At the RSCC, qualified social workers and childcare professionals provide comprehensive care to these children, including medical and psychological services, educational support, and more. These services help ensure that these vulnerable children are able to recover from the trauma they experienced and start rebuilding their lives.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What is the Main objective of the DSWD RSCC?
The RSCC’s overarching goal is to care for and protect abandoned dependent, and neglected children aged 0 to 6, including victims of exploitation, and abuse, and those children with special needs.
2. Who are the Dependent Children?
The dependent children are the children whose parents cannot take care of them for a temporary period and have no relatives to rely on and are considered orphans. Their parents were unable to meet their children’s demands because of financial issues.
3. Can the Children Use RSCC as a Laboratory for Studying?
One of the main objectives of the RSCC is to serve as a research and development laboratory for services for children. It also provides opportunities for learning and mentorship to students who are interested in working with vulnerable children.
4. Does DSWD Offer Psychological Services In RSCC?
They offer psychological services. Through the delivery of psychological services, children are able to cope with and overcome the effects of abusive situations and experiences through the provision of psychological services. It entails administering psychological tests to children in order to assess their intellectual and personality build-up, which serves as the fundamental foundation for developing a suitable care plan or therapeutic initiative.
5. What Are Foundling Children?
Foundling children refer to children who have been abandoned in the streets or other private or public places. These children are being physically abused. There are moral, well-being, and environmental risks and dangers on the streets.
Summary
The Reception and Study Center for Children (RSCC) is a special facility that provides care, protection, and support for children who have been abused or neglected.
At the RSCC, qualified social workers and childcare professionals provide comprehensive care to these vulnerable children, including medical and psychological services, educational support, and more.