Your browser doesn't support javascript.
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 159
Filter
1.
HIV Nursing ; 22(2):674-677, 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-20242992

ABSTRACT

Background: The incidence of child abuse begins with parents who cannot control their emotions in educating their children. The ability of parents to manage their emotions effectively is the main thing that parents need to have. The way that can be done to increase the emotional intelligence of parents is by socializing more and respecting others. Based on the results of the field survey, 60% of mothers who commit violence. Methods: This research method is correlation with cross sectional design. The total population in the study is the same as the total sample of 70 respondents who were found using the total sampling technique. Data collection is done directly using a questionnaire. The results of this study found the average emotional intelligence was 133.29 with a standard deviation of 5.949 and an estimated interval of 131.94-134.63, while the average incidence of child abuse was 29.84 with a standard deviation of 9.743 and an estimated interval of 27.46-31.99. Based on the results of the Pearson Product Moment test, the p-value = 0.022 (α < 0.05), meaning that there is a relationship between parental emotional intelligence and the incidence of child abuse. Based on the results of the close relationship, the value of r = -0.274, means that the lower the emotional intelligence of parents, the higher the incidence of child abuse. Conclusion: It is expected that parents can control their emotions by deep breathing relaxation, make visits for parents who have just had children to do self-assessment, and provide good parenting education in educating children. © 2022, ResearchTrentz Academy Publishing Education Services. All rights reserved.

2.
Sexual and Relationship Therapy ; 2023.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-20239575

ABSTRACT

LAY SUMMARYUsers of child sexual abuse material were interviewed about changes in their daily lives as well as sexual thoughts and behaviors during the COVID-19 restrictions. The changes found, such as in general mental health and sexual urges, can increase the risk for sexual offending and are therefore important to consider regarding possible future lockdowns. In this article, we describe a qualitative study in which we examined perceived effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on help-seeking individuals who access child sexual abuse material (CSAM, legally referred to as child pornography). The study recruited 18 participants who were part of the internet based Prevent It Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) clinical trial, which aims to reduce CSAM use and child exploitation, and were willing to answer questions during a semi-structured interview about the perceived impact of the pandemic restrictions on their lives, including their sexual thoughts and behaviors. Key themes that were identified from the participants' answers included changes in day-to-day life, mental health, sexual thoughts, behaviors or urges, responses and coping strategies used to deal with sexual urges, changes on the forums, positive changes, and how they could best be assisted with coping in this situation. Our qualitative analysis also suggested that the pandemic affected urges to use CSAM, therefore potentially increasing the risk of online sexual offending. These results support that there is a need to investigate this potential negative side effect of quarantines or lockdowns before future pandemics.

3.
Journal for ReAttach Therapy and Developmental Diversities ; 6(3s):649-661, 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-20237620

ABSTRACT

Through examination of trends in child abuse research published in academic journals from 2019 to 2021, the purpose of this study is to identify future research plans and options to address the problem of child abuse. In order to do this, we examined 288 publications on child abuse that were published in KCI-listed journals between 2019 and 2021, categorizing them into four groups: academic disciplines, research topics, research types, and research subjects. The Academy for Social Sciences, therefore, published more than 87.8% of the analysis papers in each academic field. The sequence in which the articles on each research topic were published was the influence of abuse, actual conditions and perceptions, institutions, laws, and policies. Among the empirical scientific studies, survey research accounted for most of the characteristics of each type of study, and research trends by research subjects were found to be the most common for general children. In summary, most of the topics related to child abuse during the COVID-19 period were found to be survey studies using questionnaires structured in the form of surveys on the impact of abuse on general children. Therefore, future research on child abuse should be approached at the social dimension, such as family and child protection agency workers, to intervene in the prevention of child abuse or come up with therapeutic alternatives © 2023, Journal for ReAttach Therapy and Developmental Diversities. All Rights Reserved.

4.
Early Intervention in Psychiatry ; 17(Supplement 1):230, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20234979

ABSTRACT

Epidemiological evidence has linked an array of sociodemographic and psychosocial factors with an increased risk of developing psychosis However, research in samples from low- and middle-income countries is still scarce. This study used a Mexican sample to explore (i) sociodemographic and psychosocial differences between individuals who screened positive for Clinical High-Risk for psychosis (CHRpositive group) and those who did not (Non-CHR group), and (ii) sociodemographic and psychosocial factors associated with screening positive for CHR. The sample consisted of 822 individuals from the general population. Findings showed that participants in the CHRpositive group were younger, had a lower educational level, and reported more mental health problems than the Non-CHR group. The CHR-positive group had a greater prevalence of medium/high risk associated with cannabis use, a higher prevalence of adverse experiences as well as higher levels of childhood maltreatment, poorer family functioning, and more COVID-related distress than the Non-CHR group. Findings of multivariate analysis showed that the variables associated with screening positive for CHR were: having an unhealthy family functioning, a higher risk associated with cannabis use, a lower level of education, having experienced a major natural disaster, violent or unexpected death of a relative or friend, higher levels of childhood maltreatment, and higher COVID-related distress. An older age was a protective factor for screening positive for CHR. Overall, the findings highlight the importance of examining potential psychosocial contributors to psychosis vulnerability across different sociocultural contexts to delineate risk and protective processes relevant to specific populations and better target preventive intervention efforts.

5.
Child's Nervous System ; 39(5):1423-1424, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20233073

ABSTRACT

Objective: COVID-19 lockdowns in 2020 limited activities of daily life. Data on the impact on healthcare systems is ambiguous. So far no data has been published for pediatric neurosurgery in Germany. We present the results of a big data approach. Method(s): We obtained anonymous data from the nationwide database of hospital statistics (German Federal Statistical Office, www. desta tis. de) in August 2022. For the age group <18 years in 2016- 2020, the following diagnoses (ICD-10 code) were analysed: Intracranial injury (S06), malignant (C71), benign (D33) and unspecified (D43) neoplasia, abuse (T74), violent attack (Y09) and, for comparison, forearm fracture (S52). The following operations (OPS code) were chosen: Operation of the central nervous system (CNS, 5-01- 05), excision of intracranial lesion (5-015), shunt insertion (5-023), shunt revision (5-024), plastic operations of the spinal cord (5-036) and, for comparison, overall number of operations (OPS-5), spondylodesis (5-836) and functional neurosurgery (5-028) at all ages. Result(s): The number of operations declined from 17.23 million in 2019 to 15.82 million in 2020 (8.2%). CNS operations declined by 5%. Shunt insertion declined by 8.1%, revision by 5.1% and spinal cord operations by 6.6%, whereas excisions of intracranial lesions increased by 1.7%. Spondylodesis and functional operations both decreased by 11.9%. The hospitalisations for intracranial neoplasia declined by 8.8% compared to previous years. The number of inpatients with intracranial injury declined by 16%. Violent attack was also documented less often (-13.2%), but child abuse increased by 3.3%. Forearm fractures declined by 5.6%. Conclusion(s): The COVID-19 lockdown in 2020 lead to reduction of operations. Neuro-oncological operations were not affected. Intracranial injury even declined by 16%, reflecting limited activities and mobility. An increase in documented child abuse by 3.3% compared to the average of previous years was observed. These results help understand the impact of pandemics and political decisions and guide future decision-making.

6.
Ir J Med Sci ; 2022 Jul 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-20233101

ABSTRACT

During the COVID-19 lockdown, social isolation from school closures and home visitation restrictions compounded known risk factors for child maltreatment. The aim of our study was to determine the incidence and types of child protection concern (CPC) among inpatients during the COVID-19 lockdown compared to the matched timeframe in 2019. We retrospectively reviewed the CPC assessments performed at Children's Health Ireland at Crumlin and Tallaght from March 13 to August 31, 2020, and the same period in 2019. Eighty-six versus 163 inpatients were assessed for CPC in 2020 versus 2019. Higher proportions of physical abuse concerns (52.3% versus 11% (p < 0.001)) and emotional abuse concerns (7.0% versus 1.2% (p = 0.015)) were observed in 2020. Case complexity, defined as involving two or more types of CPC, increased with 48.8% in 2020 versus 13.5% in 2019 (p < 0.001). In conclusion, there were fewer assessments for CPC during the 2020 lockdown. However, the complexity of the CPC cases was significantly increased in 2020.

7.
J Surg Res ; 276: 18-23, 2022 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-20243730

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The COVID-19 pandemic has widespread effects, including enhanced psychosocial stressors and stay-at-home orders which may be associated with higher rates of child abuse. We aimed to evaluate rates of child abuse, neglect, and inadequate supervision during the COVID-19 pandemic. METHODS: Patients ≤5 y old admitted to a level one pediatric trauma center between 3/19/20-9/19/20 (COVID-era) were compared to a pre-COVID cohort (3/19/19-9/19/19). The primary outcome was the rate of child abuse, neglect, or inadequate supervision, determined by Child Protection Team and Social Work consultations. Secondary outcomes included injury severity score (ISS), mortality, and discharge disposition. RESULTS: Of 163 total COVID-era pediatric trauma patients, 22 (13.5%) sustained child abuse/neglect, compared to 17 of 206 (8.3%) pre-COVID era patients (P = 0.13). The ISS was similar between cohorts (median 9 pre-COVID versus 5 COVID-era, P = 0.23). There was one mortality in the pre-COVID era and none during COVID (P = 0.45). The rate of discharge with someone other than the primary caregiver at time of injury was significantly higher pre-COVID (94.1% versus 59.1%, P = 0.02). In addition, foster family placement rate was twice as high pre-COVID (50.0% versus 22.7%, P = 0.10). CONCLUSIONS: The rate of abuse/neglect among young pediatric trauma patients during COVID did not differ compared to pre-pandemic, but discharge to a new caregiver was significantly lower. While likely multifactorial, this data suggests that resources during COVID may have been limited and the clinical significance of this is concerning. Larger studies are warranted to further evaluate COVID-19's effect on this vulnerable population.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Child Abuse , COVID-19/epidemiology , Child , Humans , Pandemics , Retrospective Studies , SARS-CoV-2 , Trauma Centers
8.
Cureus ; 15(4): e38022, 2023 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-20232202

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Child abuse is a significant issue across many countries. Despite the situation's innate understanding, many children are not reported to authorities and continue to experience abuse, sometimes even death. Healthcare professionals must be alert for abuse in any child who appears with injuries that are out of the ordinary because it is easy for indicators of child abuse to go unnoticed in a busy emergency department. The current study aims to evaluate and detect the challenges in diagnosing and reporting cases of child abuse among healthcare practitioners in emergency, pediatrics, and family medicine. METHODS: A self-administered online disseminated questionnaire was used for data collection during the period from October 1 to December 30, 2022. A cross-sectional study was conducted on emergency, pediatrics, and family medicine healthcare practitioners working in hospitals in healthcare centers in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. All data were collected, tabulated, and statistically analyzed using SPSS 23.0 for (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY) Windows. RESULTS: The study sample constituted 200 physicians working in the front lines of healthcare like emergency, pediatrics, and family medicine primary care services, 50.5% were males and 49.5% were females. 36.5% of participants were 31-39 years old. 42% were family medicine physicians, 36.5% were pediatricians, and 21.5% were emergency medicine. About 43% of participants attended an educational workshop on child abuse. Nineteen percent of participants are very familiar with the diagnosis of child abuse and 36% of participants reported one to three cases of child abuse in the emergency department in the last year, 5% reported four to six cases and 56.5% reported none. Forty-seven percent of participants reported diagnosing one to five cases of child abuse throughout their whole career, 13% reported 11-15 cases, 6.5% reported six to 10 cases and 28.5% reported none. Causes of underdiagnosis of child abuse by healthcare providers were reported as 63% inexperience, 59% inadequate time for physical examination, 59% lack of diagnosis protocol, 51% lack of confidence in communicating with parents, 36% physicians' cultural background, and 38% lack of confidence in the diagnosis. 93.5% of participants think that healthcare practices need further education for child abuse. CONCLUSION: In conclusion, physicians in Saudi Arabia who participated in the study had good knowledge to diagnose a case of child abuse. Inexperience, inadequate time for physical examination, lack of diagnosis protocol, lack of confidence in communicating with parents, and physicians' cultural background were the main identified challenges for diagnosing child abuse. Familiarity with cases of child abuse was significantly associated with physicians' age, specialty, and level of training.

9.
Child Youth Serv Rev ; 151: 107037, 2023 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2327985

ABSTRACT

The rate of child abuse has sharply increased worldwide, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic. As the media's role in addressing child abuse cases is crucial, several international and formal organizations have established child abuse reporting guidelines. This study investigated how closely journalists follow reporting guidelines in addressing child abuse cases. Five major Korean presses and 189 articles from January 1, 2018, to January 31, 2021, were selected using the keyword "child abuse." Each article was analyzed using a guideline framework consisting of 13 items regarding the five principles of the Korean Ministry of Health and Welfare and Central Child Protection Agency reporting guidelines. This study identified a radical growth in media reporting on child abuse cases in South Korea; almost 60% of the articles analyzed came from 2020 and 2021. More than 80% of the articles analyzed did not provide abuse resources, and 70% did not provide factual information. 57.1% of the articles instigated negative stereotypes, and about 30% explicitly mentioned certain family types in the headlines. Nearly 20% of the articles provided excessive details about the method used. Approximately 16% exposed victims' identities. Some articles (7.9%) also described victims as sharing responsibility for the abuse. This study indicates that the media reports of child abuse in South Korea did not follow the guidelines in many facets. The present study discusses the limitations of the current guidelines and suggests future directions for the news media in reporting on child abuse cases nationwide.

10.
Archives of Disease in Childhood ; 105(6), 2020.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2322154

ABSTRACT

The final act of Philip Roth's achingly poignant novel, Nemesis, based on the 1944 polio epidemic condenses the trajectories of each of the main protagonists' lives as a result of events that sultry summer, Bucky Cantor, swapping life stories with a former pupil at his school. [...]the implications for long term (psychological and physical) health are arguably worse: late presentation for other febrile illness (EDs have never been so empty—something is wrong);fear of infection by dint of ‘exposure' to a health facility;interruption of standard health surveillance particularly vaccination;mental health;child abuse as a result of prolonged internment and loss of, at least the social side of, education. The reasons for less aggressive disease are still not completely understood, though there are a number of candidate explanators: host-response factors;lower infective dose (as most often from an adult household member);age related ACE receptor differences and more recent exposure to antigenically similar coronaviruses conferring relative immunity.

11.
Hellenic Journal of Psychology ; 18(1):46-62, 2021.
Article in English | APA PsycInfo | ID: covidwho-2321419

ABSTRACT

This narrative review focuses on the risk of child abuse, the determinants of child maltreatment during the Covid-19 outbreak and the conceivable psycho-social impact of child abuse. Literature was retrieved from Scopus, PubMed, PsycINFO, Web of Science along with Google Scholar, and reports from various sources with no time and context restrictions. The narrative analysis of all pertinent records shows that the risk of abuse towards children has spiked during the Covid-19 outbreak, especially sexual abuse and neglect. Prolonged living inside of homes, school closures, limited contact, unemployment, domestic violence, poor access to health care, and related social stressors have impacted on the rates of child abuse during the Covid-19 outbreak. These maltreated children may experience poor interpersonal relationships, problematic coping behaviours, and depressive disorders across their life span. These findings point to context-specific outcomes and protective measures that could assist prospective researches and guide policies. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved)

12.
Journal of Investigative Medicine ; 69(4):910-911, 2021.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2315136

ABSTRACT

Purpose of study COVID-19 has shifted the utilization of health care resources. Gaps remain in our understanding on how COVID-19 affects trends in pediatric trauma, the leading cause of mortality and morbidity during childhood and adolescence. We identified trends in the numbers and types of traumas presenting to a Level 1 Pediatric Trauma Center during the COVID-19 pandemic compared to prior years. Methods used We compared high acuity trauma visits (defined as traumas requiring admission, emergent surgical intervention or resulting in a fatality) presenting between January 1st and August 31st, 2020 to corresponding months in 2017-2019. We also evaluated the changes in mechanisms of injury during this time period. Data were analyzed using longitudinal time series analyses and t-tests. Summary of results Of 480 traumas presenting from January to August 2020, 227 (47.3%, 95%CI 42.7%-51.9%) were high acuity traumas. High acuity traumas declined significantly, as a state of emergency was declared, to a nadir of 16 in April 2020 (compared to the 2017-2019 mean of 38.3, p<0.001). As restrictions were lifted, high acuity traumas increased and surpassed previous years to a peak of 40 visits in August 2020 (2017-2019 mean 35.7, p<0.001). High acuity traumas as a proportion of total Emergency Department visits were higher from March to August 2020 compared to prior years (figure 1). There were more visits for high acuity assaults and child abuse but fewer for falls, drownings, and motor vehicle accidents from March to August 2020 compared to prior years, while visits for animal attacks remained stable Conclusions This analysis provides insight into how the COVID-19 pandemic has affected high acuity trauma in an inner-city pediatric population. Findings may be used to guide public health measures on safety and injury prevention as the pandemic continues and further restrictions are debated. (Figure Presented).

13.
J Med Life ; 16(1): 110-120, 2023 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2318376

ABSTRACT

The study's objective was to investigate the factors associated with child and adolescent abuse in the MAMIS program at Hipólito Unanue Hospital in the Tacna-Peru region during 2019-2021. The study used a quantitative, retrospective, cross-sectional, and correlational approach to analyze 174 cases of child abuse. The study found that the majority of child abuse cases involved children between the ages of 12-17 (57.4%), with a secondary level of education (51.15%), females (56.9%), and not consuming alcohol or drugs (88.5%). Prevalent household characteristics included single-parent families (48.28%), parents aged 30-59 (58.5%), divorced (37.3%), with secondary level of education (68.9%), independent occupation (64.9%), no history of parental violence (91.3%), no addiction or substance abuse issues (95.4%), and no psychiatric disorders (95.4%). The most common types of abuse were psychological (93.68%), followed by neglect or abandonment (38.51%), physical (37.93%), and sexual (27.0%). The study determined a significant relationship (95% confidence level) between socio-demographic characteristics, such as age, sex, and substance use, and specific types of child abuse.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse , Female , Child , Adolescent , Humans , Peru , Cross-Sectional Studies , Retrospective Studies , Hospitals, Public
14.
PeerJ ; 11: e15346, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2317549

ABSTRACT

Background: There is no global consensus on whether pandemic-related factors are related to child abuse. How the pandemic reinforces the risk factors of child abuse might depend largely on individuals' current and past lifestyles in each country. Some changes of lifestyles continue after the pandemic, and it is important to understand which factors are strongly associated with child abuse. We analyzed the pandemic-related characteristics of offenders and non-offenders of self-reported child physical abuse from Internet survey data in Japan and discussed how the pandemic affected physical child abuse and what caused the difference by gender. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study on physical child abuse by caregivers based on the Internet survey conducted from September to October 2021. We divided the participants who were living with their child aged less than 14 years into offenders and non-offenders based on the answer to the question about physical child abuse. The population distribution of the sample was compared to that of caregivers under the same conditions in a large Japanese dataset. The association between their characteristics and physical child abuse was analyzed by univariable and multivariable analysis. Results: The caregivers analyzed in the cohort had similar population distributions to those in the large Japanese dataset. As risk factors of male offenders, "work from home 4-7 days/week," "decreased work," "normal relationships with household members (compared to good relationships)," "COVID-19 infected, both themselves and household members, within a year," "unwillingness to receive COVID-19 vaccination because the license process of the vaccine is doubtful," "high levels of benevolent sexism," and "history of child abuse" were observed. As risk factors of female offenders, "bad relationships with household members (compared to good relationships)," "fear of COVID-19," "COVID-19 infected, both themselves and household members, within a year," "feelings of discrimination related to COVID-19 in the past two months," and "history of child verbal abuse" were observed. Conclusions: Among male offenders, a significant relationship was observed regarding work-related changes, which may have been reinforced by the pandemic. Furthermore, the extent of the influence and fear of losing jobs caused by these changes may have varied according to the strength of gender roles and financial support in each country. Among female offenders, a significant relationship was observed regarding fear of infection itself, which is consistent with the findings of other studies. In terms of factors related to dissatisfaction with families, in some countries with prominent stereotyped gender roles, men are thought to experience difficulties adapting to work-related changes induced by crises, while women are thought to experience intense fear of the infection itself.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Child Abuse , Child , Humans , Male , Female , COVID-19/epidemiology , Pandemics , Self Report , Physical Abuse , Cross-Sectional Studies , Japan/epidemiology , COVID-19 Vaccines , Fear , Risk Factors
15.
Am Surg ; : 31348231173951, 2023 May 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2314851

ABSTRACT

A level 1 pediatric trauma registry database was examined for all non-accidental trauma (NAT) emergency department visits between 2016 and 2021, and average injury severity score assigned to those patients with physical injuries over 2019-2021. There was a decline in NAT visits in 2020 (267) from prior years (343 visits average over 2016-2019), with subsequent increase in 2021 (548). Injury severity score increased (ISS) in 2020 (7.3) when compared to 2019 (5.71), with a decline in average ISS in 2021 (5.42). This data highlights the potential for missed abuse during closures with increased detection following reopening. Our data regarding ISS demonstrates the pediatric population is at risk of more severe abuse during times of familial stress. We need increased awareness that periods of vulnerability to NAT exist, as seen during the COVID-19 pandemic.

16.
Journal of Istanbul Faculty of Medicine-Istanbul Tip Fakultesi Dergisi ; 0(0):0-0, 2023.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-2310201

ABSTRACT

Objective: We aimed to evaluate the characteristics of child sex-ual abuse reports and the affecting factors during the pandemic compared to the pre-pandemic period.Material and Method: The study included 506 children and ad-olescents admitted to the Child Advocacy Center (CAC). Case and control groups were determined according to the time of admission (first 15 months of the pandemic and 15 months be -fore the pandemic). The data were obtained by retrospectively examining the files, forensic investigation reports, family evalu-ation reports, and other documents in the files of the children in the legal process. Result: Cases applied to CAC during the pandemic decreased by 16 percent. Sexual abuse reported by teachers and profes-sionals such as public servants decreased from 30% to 4.7%. However, abuse through online platforms doubled. Finally, re-current domestic abuse increased significantly during quaran-tine (p<0.001). Conclusion: The pandemic changed the way CAC is admitted and the specifics of abuse. The teachers and public servants reported fewer incidences of sexual abuse during the pandemic period. In addition, the form of abuse shifted to the online platform, and recurrent domestic abuses have increased. Professionals working in the field of sexual abuse should keep in mind that the possible effects of these changes may continue after the pandemic.

17.
Child Abuse Review ; 32(2):1-7, 2023.
Article in English | CINAHL | ID: covidwho-2273309

ABSTRACT

Commercial sexual exploitation of children (CSEC) in child sex work is reportedly rising in Zimbabwe. While children of both sexes are affected, more females than males are forced to engage in sexual acts in exchange for money, food, access to shelter, education or some other gains from adults who control these means of survival and commodities. Drivers of CSEC include socioeconomic factors, negative peer pressure, childhood abuse, the influence of uncensored social media, and, more recently, the economic impact of COVID‐19. Involvement in underage sex work exposes children to severe adversities, such as psychosocial and mental health disorders, physical and biological injuries, venereal diseases and HIV. CSEC is a growing concern for resource‐limited countries, disenfranchises children and robs particularly the girl child of a better future. The worsening socioeconomic landscape in Zimbabwe and the COVID‐19 pandemic have exacerbated the problem. Solving the problem of CSEC requires a multipronged approach that involves stakeholders from several sectors, including public health, education, social services, security and the legal fraternity. There is a need to empower communities, empower civil society and development partners, enhance legal frameworks, provide messaging, education and vocational training, as well as rehabilitative services for affected children and their families. CSEC is a violation of the child's rights and a public health concern that needs to be addressed as a matter of urgency to preserve the next generation's human capital necessary for the sustainable development of Zimbabwe.

18.
Dissertation Abstracts International: Section B: The Sciences and Engineering ; 84(4-B):No Pagination Specified, 2023.
Article in English | APA PsycInfo | ID: covidwho-2272009

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this dissertation was to assess the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the occurrence and identification of child abuse and neglect. The first study concurrently examined changes in identification and medical evaluations of maltreatment allegations from before to during COVID-19. Reports to social services and child maltreatment evaluation center medical evaluations were collected from two counties and compared across the months of March-December 2019 and 2020. Findings showed divergent trends in reporting and evaluation of suspected maltreatment cases from before to during COVID-19. Specifically, while reports of suspected maltreatment were lower in 2020 than in 2019, the proportion of children reported to the county that received medical evaluations was higher in 2020 compared to 2019. Studies 2A and 2B took a different approach, assessing the impact of COVID-19 on laypersons' ability to identify the most common form of maltreatment, child neglect. To do so, adults read vignettes about a mother's care of her daughter and responded to questions about the mother's neglectfulness, their reporting likelihood, and their attributions of blame for the situation. Though most adults were able to distinguish situations with versus without neglect, some conflated poverty and neglect when making identification and reporting decisions. COVID-19 had an indirect, rather than direct, impact on these decisions. Moreover, attributions of blame partially explained laypersons' perceptions and reporting decisions. Together these studies can help the developing public education efforts or alternative methods of identifying vulnerable children and intervening in situations of harm. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved)

19.
Dissertation Abstracts International Section A: Humanities and Social Sciences ; 84(2-A):No Pagination Specified, 2023.
Article in English | APA PsycInfo | ID: covidwho-2260856

ABSTRACT

This dissertation is composed of three papers, all using modern applied econometric methods that try to isolate causal estimates in several important settings. Each chapter examines social and formal institutions on the well-being of children.The first chapter studies the importance of parental presence for children's adulthood labor market outcomes. Through interactions with their parents, a child develops the basic foundations for cognitive and non-cognitive skills that directly shape their adulthood economic well-being. Motivated by this critical role, a large body of research has sought to uncover the consequences of disruptions to family structure and parental inputs on a child's development. Despite its importance, we know relatively little about the consequences of the most severe form of parental absence: the death of a parent. Empirical evidence of the long-run causal effects of parental death has been limited since it requires sufficient longitudinal data and plausibly exogenous variation in parental mortality. To overcome these challenges in the literature, I make use of a rich dataset of over 180,000 historical mining accidents and link individual accident victims to the full-count U.S. Census. Doing so allows me to follow the sons of mining accident victims through to adulthood and study the causal effects of parental death on economic well-being. To identify the causal impact of parental death, I compare the adulthood outcomes of children of fatal mining accident victims to children whose parents suffered a serious but non-fatal mining accident. I find that, compared to children of non-fatal mining accident victims, bereaved children experienced nearly four percent lower wage income during adulthood. Further analyses reveal the most severe effects stem from those that lost their parent at an early age. Specifically, adults who were younger than primary school age when they lost their fathers had roughly 15 percent lower wages. Exploring potential channels, I show that most of the estimated earnings penalty can be attributed to differences in employment along both the intensive and extensive margins and is not due to differences in human capital accumulation. Bereaved sons were more likely to be out of work, report unemployment assistance, and work fewer weeks. Together, these employment channels can account for more than 60 percent of the estimated loss of adulthood income. The second chapter of this dissertation, coauthored with E. Jason Baron (a classmate at Florida State University) and Joseph P. Ryan (Professor of Social Work at the University of Michigan), examines the sources of over-representation of Black children in foster care systems and the causal effects of one popular reform that seeks to reduce this over-representation. The program, known as "blind removals," conceals demographic characteristics of children at-risk for foster care placement from child welfare professionals weighing whether or not to remove the child from their home. We present the first quantitative analysis of blind removals by examining a comprehensive administrative dataset of the universe of child maltreatment investigations in Michigan and presents two main findings. First, the over-representation of Black children in foster care systems is almost entirely driven by Black children being twice as likely to be investigated for child maltreatment as White children. Conditional on initial rates of investigation, White and Black children are placed in foster care at similar rates. Second, the study finds no evidence that blind removals impacted the already small racial disparities in the removal decision, but the program substantially increased the time to removal.The final chapter of this dissertation, coauthored with two classmates from Florida State University (E. Jason Baron and Cullen T. Wallace), highlights the link between educators... (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)

20.
Columbia Law Review ; 123(2):52-83, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2259638

ABSTRACT

Child welfare agencies and family courts have long removed children from allegedly abusive or neglectful parents as an ultimate means of ensuring a child's safety. The theory that high numbers of removals are necessary to keep children safe, however, had never been tested-there was no mechanism or political will to do so until the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020. With the near-complete shutdown of New York City, the child welfare apparatus had no choice but to remove fewer children from their homes. Catastrophe did not ensue. Rather, the numbers tell a different story. Children remained safe across a range of metrics, avoided the trauma of removal from their homes during a global pandemic, and experienced sustained safety as the City began to reopen. This Piece argues that New York's child welfare system must learn from COVID-19 and significantly curtail its drastic measure of removing children from their families, which can cause substantial, often irreparable trauma to children. It uses the COVID-19 pandemic as a case study to demonstrate the safety and soundness of reserving removals (also known as remands) for only the most extreme circumstances. This Piece focuses on the dramatic reduction of removals specifically during the pandemic;examines the traumatic, racially biased, and overused practice of family separation from a child's perspective;and calls for specific reforms within the existing system to reduce remands while protecting children's safety.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL