1. Rates and predictors of child maltreatment re-perpetration against new victims and prior victims
- Author
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Sarah A. Font, Marina Haddock Potter, and Reeve S. Kennedy
- Subjects
Parents ,Child abuse ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Article ,Neglect ,Agency (sociology) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Child Abuse ,Child ,Crime Victims ,health care economics and organizations ,media_common ,Child Protective Services ,Sex Offenses ,social sciences ,humanities ,Test (assessment) ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Physical abuse ,Sexual abuse ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Female ,Risk assessment ,Psychology ,Welfare ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Background Limited prior research has examined the rates or predictors of re-perpetration of child maltreatment. Yet, perpetrators may have multiple victims, and perpetrators, rather than their victims, are often the primary focus of child welfare services. Objective We examine rates of child maltreatment re-perpetration of repeat and new victims, and test perpetrator demographics and maltreatment index incident case characteristics as predictors of re-perpetration. Participants and setting We use a sample of 285,245 first-time perpetrators of a substantiated maltreatment incident in 2010 from the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System. Methods We use linear probability models with full information maximum likelihood to test new victim and same victim perpetration by the end of FY 2018. Results Fifteen percent of perpetrators re-maltreated one or more of their original victims (“same victim re-perpetration”); 12% maltreated a new victim. Overall, re-perpetration was more common among younger, female, and White perpetrators. Perpetrators who were the biological or adoptive parent of their initial victim(s) had higher rates of same victim re-perpetration; new victim re-perpetration was more common among perpetrators who initially victimized an adoptive or stepchild. Same victim re-perpetration was less common among perpetrators of physical abuse than other types of maltreatment, and new victim re-perpetration was more common among perpetrators of sexual abuse and neglect than physical abuse. Conclusions Child welfare agencies should track re-perpetration in addition to revictimization as part of agency evaluations and risk assessments.
- Published
- 2022
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