3C Institute
Child sexual abuse affects 12% of children worldwide, yet not enough is done to prevent it from happening—it is addressed after abuse occurs. There are few resources to support people who are attracted to children and don’t want to cause harm.
Dr. Elizabeth Letourneau and her team from the Moore Center for the Prevention of Child Sexual Abuse, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, partnered with 3C Institute to develop the Help Wanted online course, a series of modules to support youth and adolescents who are sexually attracted to children and want to live a safe, healthy, non-offending life.
Built on 3C’s Dynamic E-learning Platform (DeLP), Help Wanted is a self-paced course that contains videos and interactive exercises on topics such as what child sexual abuse is and the effects and consequences for victims and people who commit abuse. The course also contains coping strategies and resources to help course users navigate the issues they face related to their attraction and support them in living a better life.
Additional modules in development will support family and friends of young people with a sexual interest in children and counselors or therapists who treat young people who have a sexual interest in children.
Dr. Childress obtained her PhD in psychology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Prior to coming to 3C Institute, she served as a research associate and a postdoctoral fellow in the Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill working on a longitudinal imaging study aimed at identifying the early markers of autism through behavioral and imaging methodologies. She has 19 years of autism research experience, during which she has examined the behavioral, personality, and cognitive characteristics of individuals with autism and their family members. Dr. Childress also has experience developing behavioral and parent report measurement tools, coordinating multi-site research studies, and collecting data from children and families. She has taught courses and seminars in general child development, autism, and cognitive development at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.