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1.
Child Adolesc Psychiatr Clin N Am ; 33(3): 369-379, 2024 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38823810

ABSTRACT

Children and adolescents in foster care include many of the most severely traumatized victims of child abuse and neglect. They deserve the best possible care and treatment, yet their outcomes remain poor. The persistence of poor outcomes for youth in foster care reflects challenges of psychiatric diagnostic formulation and of service system design/access, both areas in which child and adolescent psychiatrists have a key role to improve care and outcomes.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse , Child Welfare , Foster Home Care , Humans , Child , Adolescent , Child Psychiatry
2.
Perspect Biol Med ; 67(2): 197-208, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38828599

ABSTRACT

This paper examines the concept and moral significance of "childhood interests." This concept is important in medical decision-making for children and more broadly in the field of pediatric ethics. The authors argue that childhood interests are identifiable components of childhood well-being that carry moral weight. Parents have a special role in protecting and promoting these interests and special obligations to do so. These parental obligations are grounded by the independent interests of the child, as well as the good of society more generally. Because parents have these child-rearing obligations, they must also have the authority and wide discretion necessary to fulfill them. However, while parental discretion is wide, it is not unlimited, for it must be used to safeguard and advance childhood interests.


Subject(s)
Parents , Humans , Child , Parents/psychology , Decision Making/ethics , Child Welfare/ethics , Moral Obligations , Child Rearing/psychology
4.
Lancet Child Adolesc Health ; 8(6): 396, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38759657
5.
West Afr J Med ; 41(3): 265-276, 2024 Mar 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38787763

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The Nigerian Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) 2008 enacted prohibitive laws against child streetism. However, in metropolises like Ibadan, there is a growing epidemic of street children, particularly the category with existing family ties known as "children on the streets". Children on the street come from home daily to engage in economic-oriented activities on the streets and return home to their families at night time. OBJECTIVE: We focused on perceptions of formal responses to the problem of child streetism in Ibadan. METHODS: This was qualitative research. Participants were selected from each of the five urban LGA of Ibadan, purposively and by snowball technique. In-depth Interviews (IDI) were conducted, audio-recorded and transcribed. Framework analysis of data was supported by ATLASTi version 22. RESULTS: Fifty-three (53) interviews were conducted including IDI with ten (10) child-welfare officers, ten (10) street shop owners, eleven (11) children on the street, and ten (10) pairs of parent-child dyads. Two themes emerged including governmental shortcomings with six subthemes and suboptimal governmental interventions with four subthemes. Child streetism in Ibadan is a consequence of the State's failed education systems, inadequate children's vocational and rehabilitation programs, lax child welfare laws, lack of empowerment of skilled children, and poor implementation of the policy on ideal family size. Interventions that were existing but sub-optimal included communitybased child welfare programs, parental poverty alleviation, public sensitisation and child welfare monitoring programmes. CONCLUSION: There is an urgent need to update, enforce laws, and amalgamate efforts against child streetism in Ibadan.


CONTEXTE: La Convention nigériane relative aux droits de l'enfant (CRC) de 2008 a promulgué des lois interdisant le travail des enfants dans la rue. Cependant, dans des métropoles comme Ibadan, il existe une épidémie croissante d'enfants des rues, en particulier la catégorie ayant des liens familiaux existants connue sous le nom d'"enfants des rues". Les enfants des rues viennent de chez eux tous les jours pour participer à des activités orientées vers l'économie dans les rues et rentrent chez eux auprès de leurs familles le soir. OBJECTIF: Nous nous sommes concentrés sur les perceptions des réponses formelles au problème du travail des enfants dans la rue à Ibadan. MÉTHODES: Il s'agissait d'une recherche qualitative. Les participants ont été sélectionnés dans chacun des cinq LGA urbains d'Ibadan, de manière délibérée et par la technique de la boule de neige. Des entretiens approfondis (IDI) ont été réalisés, enregistrés et retranscrits. L'analyse thématique des données a été soutenue par ATLAS-Ti version 22. RÉSULTATS: Cinquante-trois (53) entretiens ont été menés, comprenant des IDI avec dix (10) agents de protection de l'enfance, dix (10) propriétaires de magasins de rue, onze (11) enfants des rues et dix (10) paires de dyades parent-enfant. Deux thèmes ont émergé, comprenant des lacunes gouvernementales avec six sous-thèmes et des interventions gouvernementales suboptimales avec quatre sous-thèmes. Le travail des enfants dans la rue à Ibadan est une conséquence des systèmes éducatifs défaillants de l'État, des programmes de formation et de réadaptation insuffisants pour les enfants, des lois laxistes sur la protection de l'enfance, du manque d'autonomisation des enfants qualifiés et de la mauvaise mise en œuvre de la politique sur la taille idéale de la famille. Les interventions existantes mais suboptimales comprenaient des programmes communautaires de protection de l'enfance, l'alleviation de la pauvreté des parents, la sensibilisation du public et les programmes de suivi de la protection de l'enfance. CONCLUSION: Il est urgent de mettre à jour, d'appliquer les lois et de regrouper les efforts contre le travail des enfants dans la rue à Ibadan. MOTS-CLÉS: Travail des enfants dans la rue, Protection sociale, Droits de l'enfant, Lois, Famille.


Subject(s)
Child Welfare , Homeless Youth , Qualitative Research , Humans , Nigeria , Child , Female , Male , Child Welfare/legislation & jurisprudence , Homeless Youth/psychology , Interviews as Topic , Adolescent , Adult
7.
BMC Oral Health ; 24(1): 427, 2024 Apr 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38582849

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The aptitude, knowledge, and competence of dental health personnel on child abuse and neglect (CAN) is not optimal for deciding when to file a report of concern to child welfare services (CWS). OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was, firstly, to assess the association of the public dental health personnel 's (PDHP) training on CAN received in the last three work years, i.e., in 2016 through 2018 with filing reports to the CWS in the same period and secondly to assess the association of expressed need of training on CAN with filing reports to the CWS. METHODS: This cross-sectional study uses data from an electronic survey census of PDHP from Norway (n = 1791) conducted in 2019. The Pearson chi-square test, non-parametric tests, logistic, and negative binomial regression were used for unadjusted and adjusted analysis. Data was reported with proportions, odds ratios (OR), incidence rate ratios and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). RESULTS: From 2016 to 2018, the prevalence estimate of filing reports to CWS was 50%, with a mean (standard deviation) of 1.39 (2.11) reports sent. The logistic regression analysis showed an association between filing reports of concern and CAN training in the last three years. Compared to those that had not received CAN training during the three previous years, the ORs (95% CI) for filing reports to the CWS during the same period was 2.5 (1.6-4.0) for one day CAN work training, 3.2 (2.0-5.1) for 2-4 days CAN training and 4.9 (2.6-9.4) for five or more days CAN training. Compared to workers who did not need training in reporting (routines of CAN), those who expressed the need for a little more and more training were less likely to file a report. The corresponding OR were 0.6 (0.4-0.9) and 0.6 (0.3-0.9), respectively. CONCLUSION: CAN training during the last three years is associated with filing reports of concern to CWS in the same period among PDHP in Norway. The likelihood of filing CAN reports increased with the number of days of CAN training received. Secondly, the PDHP with an expressed need for training on CAN routines were less likely to report suspicions to CWS.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse , Filing , Child , Humans , Cross-Sectional Studies , Child Welfare , Mandatory Reporting
8.
Child Abuse Negl ; 152: 106772, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38574602

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Successful interprofessional collaborations have been identified as a potential solution to mitigate problems associated with negative outcomes for clients involved with the child welfare system. The barriers to collaborative relationships need to be better understood and effectively addressed. OBJECTIVE: To understand the characteristics, barriers, and facilitators of collaborations between different types of providers and child welfare workers, as well as their impacts. PARTICIPANTS AND SETTING: Mental health professionals, foster and kinship parents, legal professionals, and other providers responded to an online survey distributed in a Northeastern State of the United States of America. METHOD: Participants (n = 208) completed the Quality of Collaboration with Child Welfare survey. Qualitative responses were analyzed by three coders using three levels of axial coding with constant comparison. RESULTS: Participants identified different aspects of communication, relationships, and follow-through as key elements of successful collaborations, as well as the items most likely to interfere with their formation. Providers differed somewhat in how concerned they were with various aspects of collaborations in accordance with their professional roles. Barriers to successful collaborations included both individual and systemic factors which often resulted in negative outcomes. Overall, more negative experiences were offered than positive ones. CONCLUSIONS: Strategies are needed to improve communication, promote positive relationships, and address systemic barriers to enhance collaboration and, in turn, improve outcomes for child welfare-involved clients.


Subject(s)
Child Protective Services , Child Welfare , Humans , Child , Child Protective Services/organization & administration , Female , Male , Adult , Interprofessional Relations , Cooperative Behavior , Surveys and Questionnaires , Middle Aged , Attitude of Health Personnel , Qualitative Research , Health Personnel/psychology , United States
9.
Addict Sci Clin Pract ; 19(1): 32, 2024 Apr 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38671544

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Health care providers are a key source of reports of infants to child welfare related to birthing people's substance use. Many of these reports are overreports, or reports that exceed what is legally mandated, and reflect racial bias. We developed and evaluated a webinar for health professionals to address overreporting related to birthing people's substance use. METHODS: This evaluation study collected data from health professionals registering to participate in a professional education webinar about pregnancy, substance use, and child welfare reporting. It collected baseline data upon webinar registration, immediate post-webinar data, and 6 month follow-up data. Differences in both pre-post-and 6 month follow-up data were used to examine changes from before to after the webinars in beliefs, attitudes, and practices related to pregnant and birthing people who use drugs and child welfare reporting. RESULTS: 592 nurses, social workers, physicians, public health professionals, and other health professionals completed the baseline survey. More than half of those completing the baseline survey (n = 307, 52%) completed one or both follow-up surveys. We observed statistically significant changes in five of the eleven opioid attitudes/beliefs and in four of the nine child welfare attitudes/beliefs from baseline to follow-ups, and few changes in "control statements," i.e. beliefs we did not expect to change based on webinar participation. All of the changes were in the direction of less support for child welfare reporting. In particular, the proportion agreeing with the main evaluation outcome of "I would rather err on the side of overreporting to child welfare than underreporting to child welfare" decreased from 41% at baseline to 28% and 31% post-webinar and at 6-month follow up (p = 0.001). In addition, fewer participants endorsed reporting everyone at the 6 month follow-up than at baseline (12% to 22%) and more participants endorsed reporting no one at the 6-month follow-up than at baseline (28% to 18%), p = 0.013. CONCLUSIONS: Webinars on the legal, scientific, and ethical aspects of reporting that are co-developed with people with lived experience may be a path to reducing health professional overreporting to child welfare related to birthing people's substance use.


Subject(s)
Child Welfare , Health Personnel , Humans , Female , Pregnancy , Male , Substance-Related Disorders/epidemiology , Adult , Child , Infant , Mandatory Reporting , Attitude of Health Personnel
10.
Eval Program Plann ; 104: 102428, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38564974

ABSTRACT

Child abuse, particularly neglect, is often preventable because many causes of harm stem from poverty, lack of social connections, substance use disorders, mental illness, lack of childcare, and other family support shortages. Prevention of child abuse and neglect starts with family support in these areas. The federal government recognized this need for prevention, and through considerable bipartisan support, passed the Family First Prevention Services Act on February 9, 2018. The Family First Prevention Services Act was designed to divert investment away from long-term foster care and toward programs that prevent unnecessary placement and child protective services interventions. The Family First Prevention Services Act restricts the state's use of federal funds for institutional foster care placements and uses those savings to fund reimbursements for evidence-based family preservation. The requirement for evidence-based prevention is a first in child-welfare federal law, and compliance with this requirement requires public-private partnership with agencies implementing the models, infrastructure, and evaluation standards that most states must build to be eligible for the new funding. This evaluation research analyzed how the stringent guidelines for prevention funding and the requirement of federally approved evidence-based practice programming affect the implementation of the Family First Prevention Services Act in Nebraska and Colorado.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse , Evidence-Based Practice , Humans , Colorado , Child Abuse/prevention & control , Child , Nebraska , Foster Home Care/organization & administration , Program Evaluation , Child Protective Services/organization & administration , Child Welfare
11.
Child Abuse Negl ; 152: 106793, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38636155

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Many studies have explored the impact of child removal on both children and professionals, but there is limited research on the experiences of mothers whose children social services had removed from their homes, particularly within Arab society. OBJECTIVE: This study focused on Arab mothers from East Jerusalem-an ethnic minority in Israel's society, that faces unique challenges-whose children removed from home. The study examines, from the mothers' perspectives (1) reasons for the removal, and (2) relationships with welfare services. METHODS: 15 Arab mothers from East Jerusalem, aged 25 to 49 who had at least one child removed through a court order participated in the study. Nine of the mothers were divorced, separated, or widowed. RESULTS: The mothers described several reasons for their children's removal, including domestic violence and lack of support from their own families after leaving abusive husbands, poverty leading to what social services interpreted as neglect, the child's challenging behavior, and false accusations. The second theme reveals a lack of cooperation between social workers and the mothers, and social workers' negative perceptions of the mothers hindering reunification. CONCLUSIONS: The study sheds light, for the first time as far as we know, on the perspectives of Arab mothers concerning their children's removal. Early support could avert removal, and social workers should make greater efforts to promote child reunification. It is paramount that professionals build trust with these mothers, through culturally sensitive and empowering engagement.


Subject(s)
Arabs , Mothers , Humans , Arabs/psychology , Mothers/psychology , Female , Israel , Adult , Middle Aged , Child , Social Support , Child Abuse , Male , Domestic Violence/psychology , Divorce/psychology , Child Welfare/psychology
12.
Perspect Sex Reprod Health ; 56(1): 30-40, 2024 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38439212

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Early sexual activity and teen pregnancy are known risk factors for delinquency and justice involvement among male adolescents. However, less is known about these patterns among child welfare system (CWS)-involved boys who face significant social barriers and past/current traumatic experiences. METHODS: We prospectively examined these associations among male adolescents who identified as low and high risk for child-maltreatment via a secondary data analysis of the Longitudinal Studies of Child Abuse and Neglect dataset-a large scale assessment of children, their parents, and their teachers in the United States to understand issues of child abuse and neglect. We extracted and examined data from 657 boys who were identified as at-risk for maltreatment or with histories of substantiated maltreatment at ages 6, 8, 12, 14, and 16. We used structural equation modeling to examine the relationship between sexual activity (i.e., age of sexual debut, actively having sex, and sex resulting in a child) and changes in delinquency and justice involvement. RESULTS: Male adolescents who have engaged in sex and/or have fathered a child had greater increases in delinquency over time compared to those who have not had sex. Further, fathering a child was significantly associated with justice involvement, especially for the high-risk group. CONCLUSION: Results indicate that greater efforts should be taken to ascertain CWS-involved male adolescents' sexual health practices and parenting status. Male adolescents in the CWS require support with accessing developmentally appropriate sexual health education and family services.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse , Adolescent , Child , Humans , Male , Child Welfare , Prospective Studies , Sexual Behavior , Social Justice , United States
13.
Hosp Pediatr ; 14(4): 308-316, 2024 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38477053

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Parents of pediatric patients are key stakeholders in the design and implementation of health-related social needs (HRSN) screening programs. Yet, there is little research exploring their perspectives on the documentation and sharing of HRSN data. We aimed to examine parents' preferences regarding how HRSN data are documented and shared. METHODS: We conducted semi-structured interviews with parents of hospitalized children participating in an HRSN screening program at a quaternary care children's hospital. Interviews were coded using an inductive and deductive approach to identify emergent themes. RESULTS: The 20 interviewed parents were uniformly female with 55% identifying as Black or African American and 20% identifying as Hispanic or Latino. Parents expressed comfort with electronic health record documentation of HRSN data and the use of International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision Z codes as long as this information was used to provide families with meaningful support. Most parents viewed social workers and medical teams as the most appropriate recipients of HRSN data. Few parents felt comfortable with HRSN data being shared with payors. Parents desired transparency around HRSN data sharing. Many expressed concerns that documentation and sharing of HRSN data could lead to unwanted or unsafe disclosures or result in child welfare referrals. CONCLUSIONS: Parents expressed comfort with HRSN documentation and sharing with health care providers, but requested that providers be transparent and respect parental preferences regarding data sharing to mitigate potential harms. When implementing HRSN support programs, health systems and payors should prioritize transparency around documentation and data sharing with families.


Subject(s)
Child Welfare , Parents , Child , Humans , Female , Social Support , Child, Hospitalized , Health Personnel
14.
Child Abuse Negl ; 151: 106706, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38428267

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Early identification of children and families who may benefit from support is crucial for implementing strategies that can prevent the onset of child maltreatment. Predictive risk modeling (PRM) may offer valuable and efficient enhancements to existing risk assessment techniques. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the PRM's effectiveness against the existing assessment tool in identifying children and families needing home visiting services. PARTICIPANTS AND SETTING: Children born in hospitals affiliated with the Bridges Maternal Child Health Network in Orange County, California, from 2011 to 2016 (N = 132,216). METHODS: We developed a PRM tool by integrating a machine learning algorithm with a linked dataset of birth records and child protection system (CPS) records. To align with the existing assessment tool (baseline model), we limited the predicting features to the information used by the existing tool. The need for home visiting services was measured by substantiated maltreatment allegation reported during the first three years of the child's life. RESULTS: Of the children born in Bridges Network hospitals between 2011 and 2016, 2.7 % experienced substantiated maltreatment allegations by the age of three. Within the top 30 % of children with high-risk scores, the PRM tool outperformed the baseline model, accurately identifying 75.3 %-84.1 % of all children who would experience maltreatment substantiation, surpassing the baseline model's performance of 46.2 %. CONCLUSIONS: Our study underscores the potential of PRM in enhancing the risk assessment tool used by a prevention program in a child welfare center in California. The findings provide valuable insights to practitioners interested in utilizing data for PRM development, highlighting the potential of machine learning algorithms to generate accurate predictions and inform targeted preventive services.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse , Child , Humans , Child Abuse/prevention & control , Child Welfare , Risk Factors , Risk Assessment , Preventive Health Services
15.
Subst Use Misuse ; 59(7): 1072-1082, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38433337

ABSTRACT

Background: Family Dependency Treatment Court (FDTC) is a problem-solving court for parents who have child welfare involvement and designed to address parental substance misuse by providing treatment and wrap-around services, with the goal of reunifying parents with their children. Objectives: This study aimed to identify different classes of FDTC parents and compare how child placement outcomes differ by class. Parental characteristics and permanent placement outcomes for 354 parents participating in a Central Florida FDTC were assessed using administrative data. An exploratory latent class analysis was conducted to classify parents. Results: Results revealed three distinct classes of FDTC participants: 1) co-occurring issues, 2) racial/ethnic minority participants, and 3) prescription opioid, meth, and heroin users. Regression analyses showed that parents with co-occurring issues were over two times more likely to achieve permanency (OR = 2.05, p < .05), and were two times less likely to terminate their parental rights (TPR) compared to the other two classes. Conclusions: Implications for tailoring FDTC procedures to parents' individual needs, combating racial/ethnic disparities in access to services and placement outcomes, and improved child welfare and placement outcomes are discussed.


Subject(s)
Ethnicity , Minority Groups , Child , Humans , Parents , Child Welfare , Florida
16.
Soc Sci Med ; 348: 116768, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38537452

ABSTRACT

The children's mental health landscape is rapidly changing, and youth with mental health conditions (MHCs) are overrepresented in the child welfare system. Mental health is the largest unmet health need in child welfare, so MHCs may affect the likelihood of system reentry. Concerns regarding mental health contribute to calls for expanded supports, yet systems contact can also generate risk of continued child welfare involvement via surveillance. Still, we know little about how expanded supports at the state-level shape child welfare outcomes. Using the Adoption and Foster Care Analysis Reporting System (AFCARS), we examine the association between MHCs and system reentry within 36 months among youth who reunified with their families in 2016 (N = 41,860). We further examine whether this association varies across states and White, Black, and Latinx racial and ethnic groups via two- and three-way interactions. Results from multilevel models show that, net of individual and state-level factors, MHCs are associated with higher odds of reentry. This relationship is stronger for youth in states that expanded Medicaid by 2016 and with higher Medicaid/CHIP child participation rates. The results also show evidence of the moderating role of state-level factors, specifically student-to-school counselor ratio, diverging across racial and ethnic groups. Our results suggest a need for systems of care to better support youth mental health and counteract potential surveillance.


Subject(s)
Racial Groups , Humans , United States , Child , Female , Male , Adolescent , Racial Groups/statistics & numerical data , Racial Groups/psychology , Child Welfare/statistics & numerical data , Foster Home Care/statistics & numerical data , Foster Home Care/psychology , Mental Health , Child, Preschool , Mental Disorders/ethnology , Mental Disorders/therapy , Ethnicity/statistics & numerical data , Ethnicity/psychology , Medicaid/statistics & numerical data , Family/psychology , Adoption/psychology
17.
Child Abuse Negl ; 151: 106750, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38492536

ABSTRACT

A renowned group of pediatricians and an attorney with expertise in child abuse matters proposed a medical definition of intrafamilial child torture perpetrated by a caretaker in a landmark 2014 publication in the health sciences literature. Representing one of the most widely cited publications on non-politically motivated child torture to date, this medical definition encompassing physical abuse, psychological abuse, deprivation, and neglect characterizing child torture has been broadly recognized and accepted by multidisciplinary professionals across medical, child welfare, and criminal justice sectors. While the medical community's efforts aimed to compel legislative changes, including adoption of explicit torture-specific statutes that would enable criminal justice system responses reflective of abuse severity, subsequent legal analyses have revealed tremendous variability in criminal investigations, prosecution, sentencing, and case outcomes. In this discussion piece, medico-legal issues relevant to intrafamilial child torture case prosecution are reviewed. The impact of the established medical definition on jurisdictional legal approaches and unique case challenges related to longitudinal nature of abuse, frequent psychological injury, and victim-perpetrator dynamics are explored in depth. Utilizing available legal research platforms, investigative information, health sciences literature, and prosecutor self-report, existing child torture statutes and case outcomes were compared with focus on perpetrator, victim, socio-environmental, and community influence on legal outcome. Prosecutorial challenges facing jurisdictions lacking child torture statutes are discussed with emphasis placed on the critical role played by the medical community to support diagnosis of physical and emotional impacts to the child. Finally, the process by which states can establish a jurisdictional torture statute are suggested.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse , Criminals , Torture , Child , Humans , Child Welfare , Criminal Law , Law Enforcement , Torture/psychology
18.
Child Abuse Negl ; 149: 106712, 2024 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38401367

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Resource parent trainings are an important factor in caregiver readiness and retention, which can improve placement stability and permanency achievement for children and youth, especially those who are marginalized. OBJECTIVE: Resource parents need access to evidence-based training programs attentive to caring for children and youth from a variety of diverse backgrounds. This study evaluates placement, permanency, and stability outcomes of children whose resource parents were trained in one such program: the National Training and Development Curriculum (NTDC). PARTICIPANTS AND SETTING: Participants include adults who completed a resource parent training program (N = 3822) and children in their care (N = 2565) in the U.S. states of Florida, Georgia, Illinois, and Missouri. METHODS: This quasi-experimental study involved statistical testing of caregivers and children using AFCARS data. Propensity-score matching was used to control for differences in the child permanency analysis. RESULTS: With a better understanding of the realities of fostering, NTDC participants were slightly less likely to foster after training (OR = 0.6; p < .001), self-selecting out before taking a child into the home. Those who did foster were more likely to foster a child who is a teen (OR = 1.4; p = .004), Asian/Asian American (OR = 3.8; p = .02), Black/African American (OR = 1.6; p < .001), or Hispanic/Latinx (OR = 1.7; p = .002). Children of NTDC caregivers entered legal adoptions (OR = 2.0; p = .003) and guardianships (OR = 2.9; p = .03) at higher rates than children of comparison caregivers, while rates of reunification (OR = 1.3; p = .11) were not statistically different. CONCLUSIONS: Evidence points to the effectiveness of NTDC in preparing resource parents to provide care for a diverse range of children by age, race, and ethnicity, and for those children to achieve permanency.


Subject(s)
Child Welfare , Foster Home Care , Child , Adult , Adolescent , Humans , Adoption , Parents , Curriculum
19.
Child Abuse Negl ; 149: 106702, 2024 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38422581

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: While past research has suggested the importance of informal social support and early childhood programs for the well-being of child welfare supervised families and children, little is known about whether or not these mechanisms function as protective factors for child welfare involved families and mediate the likelihood of repeat child maltreatment. OBJECTIVE: The study examined the role of informal social support and early childhood program participation in mediating the effects of initial report of child neglect on subsequent child maltreatment reports. PARTICIPANTS & SETTING: The study sample of children ages 0-6 (N = 1963) was drawn from the NSCAW-II dataset, a nationally representative longitudinal dataset of 5872 child welfare supervised children and their families. METHODS: Structural Equation Modeling was used to examine the direct and indirect pathways: from initial report of neglect to all subsequent child maltreatment reports and from initial report of neglect to all subsequent child maltreatment reports through mediating variables such as informal social support and early childhood programs. RESULTS: Results showed that informal social support plays an important role in reducing the likelihood of subsequent reports (b = -0.00, p = 0.005). One unit increase in informal social support reduced the odds of a child maltreatment re-report by 0.3 % (odds ratio for informal social support OR = 0.997). IMPLICATIONS: It is important that child welfare supervised families are supported in enhancing their informal networks with their family members and friends and expanding non-familial informal networks in the community.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse , Child , Child, Preschool , Humans , Child Abuse/prevention & control , Child Welfare , Social Support , Parent-Child Relations , Risk Factors
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