20 results on '"Katz, Ilan"'
Search Results
2. The national evaluation of the Communities for children initiative.
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MUIR, Kirsty, EDWARDS, Ben, GRAY, Matthew, WISE, Sarah, HAYES, Alan, and Katz, Ilan
- Published
- 2010
3. Enhancing Service Systems for Protecting Children: Promoting Child Wellbeing and Child Protection Reform in Australia
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Higgins, Daryl and Katz, Ilan
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- 2008
4. Community Interventions for Vulnerable Children and Families: Participation and Power
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Katz, Ilan
- Published
- 2007
5. Child protection services for children with special healthcare needs: A population record linkage study.
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Hindmarsh, Gabrielle, Laurens, Kristin R., Katz, Ilan, Butler, Merran, Harris, Felicity, Carr, Vaughan J., and Green, Melissa J.
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CHILD protection services ,CHILD welfare ,CHILDREN with disabilities ,CHILDREN'S rights ,SOCIAL policy ,PHYSICAL abuse - Abstract
Children with disabilities are known to have high rates of contact with child protection services. However, little is known about child protection contacts for a broader group of children with special healthcare needs (SHCN; i.e., special needs or other impairments of concern that affect learning). This study examined the characteristics of contact with child protection services (prior to the age of 6 years) for children with SHCN identified at school entry using the 2009 Australian Early Development Census, using administrative data from more than 65,000 children in the New South Wales Child Development Study. Child protection contacts prior to age 6 years were more prevalent among children with SHCN compared with those without; in particular, children with SHCN had higher odds of a history of exposure to neglect and physical abuse, and higher odds of being placed in out‐of‐home care, compared with their typically developing peers. Understanding the characteristics of child protection contacts among children with SHCN, with consideration of factors that may influence their patterns of contact with these and other human services agencies, will inform the development of appropriate social policy initiatives to fulfil Australia's obligations under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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6. Mental disorders in children known to child protection services during early childhood.
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Green, Melissa J., Hindmarsh, Gabrielle, Kariuki, Maina, Laurens, Kristin R., Neil, Amanda L, Katz, Ilan, Chilvers, Marilyn, Harris, Felicity, and Carr, Vaughan J
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CHILD protection services ,CHILD psychiatry ,CHILD welfare ,MENTAL illness ,FOSTER home care ,CHILD abuse & psychology ,PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology ,RESEARCH ,PSYCHOLOGY of parents ,CHILD abuse ,RESEARCH methodology ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,COMPARATIVE studies ,LOGISTIC regression analysis - Abstract
Objectives: To examine associations between being the subject of child protection reports in early childhood and diagnoses of mental disorders during middle childhood, by level of service response.Design, Setting, Participants: Retrospective analysis of linked New South Wales administrative data, 2001-2016, for a population cohort of children (mean age in 2016, 13.2 years; SD, 0.37 years) enrolled in the longitudinal NSW Child Development Study (NSW-CDS), wave 2 linkage.Main Outcome Measures: Associations between being the subject of a child protection report (any, and by level of child protection response) during early childhood (birth to 6 years of age) and diagnoses of mental disorders during middle childhood (6-14 years).Results: 13 796 of 74 462 children in the NSW-CDS (18.5%) had been the subjects of reports to child protection services during early childhood: 1148 children had been placed in out-of-home care at least once, and 1680 had been the subjects of substantiated risk-of-significant-harm reports but were not placed in care, while 9161 had non-substantiated reports, and 1807 had reports of facts that did not reach the threshold for significant harm. After adjusting for sex, socio-economic disadvantage, perinatal complications, and parental mental illness, early childhood contact with protection services was associated with increased frequency of being diagnosed with a mental disorder during middle childhood (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 2.72; 95% CI, 2.51-2.95). The frequency was highest for children who had been placed in out-of-home care (aOR, 5.25; 95% CI, 4.46-6.18).Conclusion: Childhood-onset mental disorders are more frequently diagnosed in children who come to the attention of child protection services during early childhood, particularly in children placed in out-of-home care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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7. Pathways of Children Reported for Domestic and Family Violence to Australian Child Protection.
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Shlonsky, Aron, Ma, Jennifer, Jeffreys, Colleen, Parolini, Arno, and Katz, Ilan
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PREVENTION of child abuse ,CHILD abuse & psychology ,CHILD welfare ,CHILD abuse ,CHILDREN'S accident prevention ,DOMESTIC violence ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Copyright of Australian Social Work is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2019
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8. Typologies of Child Protection Systems: An International Approach.
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Connolly, Marie and Katz, Ilan
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CHILD abuse laws , *PREVENTION of child abuse , *CHILD welfare , *CULTURE , *MENTAL orientation , *QUALITY assurance , *RISK assessment , *SOCIAL support , *HUMAN services programs - Abstract
In recent decades, typologies have been developed to better understand the way in which different countries create systems to protect the interests of vulnerable children and their families. A child protection system typology is a classification of a set of characteristics that capture and define different approaches to child protection. Typologies are helpful in enabling comparisons of systems across international contexts, helping also to illuminate the various strengths and weaknesses of child protection systems. Typologies can also guide or redirect the development of a system, as they illustrate the varied ways in which children might be better protected. They explain how a cultural value base underpins approaches to child protection and can suggest alternative ways in which a system might evolve, based on the experiences of other countries. This article builds upon early typology building work and presents an international child protection system typology that has universal application. Country examples are used to illustrate the development of systems across two dimensions: whether they are oriented towards an individual or community focus; and whether systems are more, or less, regulated. Key Practitioner Messages: There are a number of different legitimate approaches to developing an effective child protection system, and countries develop their system according to their own circumstances, values and beliefs. No one way is necessarily the right way.Typologies of child protection systems can: help us to understand and compare the strengths and weaknesses of systems; guide or redirect the development of systems; and suggest alternative ways of developing systems to those already in existence.Typologies explain how a cultural value base underpins approaches to child protection and can suggest alternative ways in which a system might evolve, based on the experiences of other countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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9. One year into COVID-19: What have we learned about child maltreatment reports and child protective service responses?
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Katz, Ilan, Priolo-Filho, Sidnei, Katz, Carmit, Andresen, Sabine, Bérubé, Annie, Cohen, Noa, Connell, Christian M., Collin-Vézina, Delphine, Fallon, Barbara, Fouche, Ansie, Fujiwara, Takeo, Haffejee, Sadiyya, Korbin, Jill E., Maguire-Jack, Katie, Massarweh, Nadia, Munoz, Pablo, Tarabulsy, George M., Tiwari, Ashwini, Truter, Elmien, and Varela, Natalia
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REPORTING of child abuse , *CHILD protection services , *CHILD abuse , *COVID-19 , *CHILD welfare - Abstract
A year has passed since COVID-19 began disrupting systems. Although children are not considered a risk population for the virus, there is accumulating knowledge regarding children's escalating risk for maltreatment during the pandemic. The current study is part of a larger initiative using an international platform to examine child maltreatment (CM) reports and child protective service (CPS) responses in various countries. The first data collection, which included a comparison between eight countries after the pandemic's first wave (March–June 2020), illustrated a worrisome picture regarding children's wellbeing. The current study presents the second wave of data across 12 regions via population data (Australia [New South Wales], Brazil, United States [California, Pennsylvania], Colombia, England, Germany, Israel, Japan, Canada [Ontario, Quebec], South Africa). Regional information was gathered, including demographics, economic situation, and CPS responses to COVID-19. A descriptive analysis was conducted to provide an overview of the phenomenon. Across all of the countries, COVID-19 had a substantial negative impact on the operation of CPSs and the children and families they serve by disrupting in-person services. One year into the COVID-19 pandemic, new reports of CM varied across the regions. 1 1 The term regions is used rather than countries because in some countries child protection systems are governed by states or provinces rather than at the national level. In some, the impact of COVID-19 on CPS was low to moderate, while in others, more significant changes created multiple challenges for CPS services. COVID-19 created a barrier for CPS to access and protect children. The dramatic variance between the regions demonstrated how social, economic and structural contexts impact both CM reports and CPS responses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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10. How early is early intervention and who should get it? Contested meanings in determining thresholds for intervention.
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valentine, kylie and Katz, Ilan
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GOVERNMENT agencies , *CHILD welfare , *FAMILIES , *FOCUS groups , *HEALTH care reform , *INTERVIEWING , *MEDICAL care , *NONPROFIT organizations , *SENSORY perception , *RISK assessment , *QUALITATIVE research , *EARLY intervention (Education) , *THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
The latest wave of reforms of the child protection system in Australia have been based on attempts to provide support to all families with vulnerable children, rather than increasing surveillance of ‘at risk’ families and forensic responses to incidents of maltreatment. This includes a drive to widen the remit of child protection from the statutory child protection agency and involve other government agencies such as health and education as well as the non-government sector in child protection. This paper reports on the effects of one such reform, the NSW initiative Keep Them Safe. It focuses on the classification of families as needing either early intervention or intensive support, using thematic analysis of qualitative interview data. Method Interviews and focus groups were conducted with practitioners and managers from human service agencies (total n = 115), and discussed their perceptions of the initiative and the changes it had introduced to service delivery. Findings Practitioners discussed family needs in ways which contested the policy meanings of ‘early intervention’: whether families are conceptualised in terms of their needs or risk; whether engagement with services should be voluntary or mandated; and whether the agencies to support them should be the statutory agency or an NGO. The implications for these tensions, in terms of policy and practice, are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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11. Recommendations for Improving Cultural Competency When Working with Ethnic Minority Families in Child Protection Systems in Australia.
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Sawrikar, Pooja and Katz, Ilan
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CHILD abuse , *CHILD rearing , *CHILD welfare , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *ETHNIC groups , *PUNISHMENT , *RACISM , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIAL workers , *CULTURAL awareness , *CULTURAL competence - Abstract
Australia's research and knowledge base on cultural competency has been slow to develop. To help address this gap, the New South Wales (NSW) Department of Family and Community Services (FaCS) funded a large scale study in this area, which included a detailed literature review. The paper reports on key findings from that review including that collectivist values are at odds with 'child-centred' philosophies of child protection; there is an inherent tension between the right to equal protection from harm and the right for respect in cultural differences in parenting and family functioning ('cultural absolutism' versus 'cultural relativism'); there are factors that uniquely characterise 'the migrant context' (especially lack of awareness of child protection laws and systems, economic disadvantage, and fear of authority); and that cultural competency is separable from cultural awareness and cultural sensitivity, and also different from addressing language barriers. However, in reviewing the literature it became apparent that the specific roles and responsibilities of workers, agencies, and systems were not clearly delineated. Thus this paper also aimed to address this unmet need. Identifying their unique roles and responsibilities can help ensure that the delivery of child protection services are efficiently and effectively mobilised from both the 'top' and 'bottom' to benefit all ethnic minority families. Moreover, any implementation of cultural competency needs to move beyond the emphasis on culture and acknowledge the dimensions of inferiority and oppression to truly promote value for diversity and protect ethnic minority children from the dangers of systematic disadvantage that institutional racism represents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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12. Missing Elements in the Protection of Children: Three Cases from China.
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Shang, Xiaoyuan and Katz, Ilan
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MASS media , *CHILD welfare , *CHILD abuse , *GUARDIAN & ward , *PARENT-child relationships - Abstract
The article analyzes 3 severe cases of child abuse that were widely discussed in the mass media in China in 2007 based on a framework used by the International Society for Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect in its official publicationWorld Perspectives on Child Abuse. The framework sets out the basic elements that must be included in systems of child protection: a) a responsible government or government-authorized organization; b) a set of institutional arrangements for reporting cases of child abuse, investigation, and intervening when necessary; and c) state guardianship or mechanisms to remove children from their parents’ care when necessary. By applying the framework to the 3 cases under analysis, the authors found that these basic elements are missing from the Chinese child protection system, and therefore, they recommend that a reform of the system to address these elements should be a priority for Chinese social policy. The article makes a number of recommendations for reform. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2014
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13. Comment on: A Comparison of Out-of-home Care for Children and Young People in Australia and Sweden: Worlds Apart?
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Katz, Ilan
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AGE distribution , *CHILD welfare , *COMPARATIVE studies , *FOSTER home care , *HOMELESSNESS , *JUVENILE offenders , *RESIDENTIAL care - Abstract
The article presents the author's views on a paper by K. Healy and colleague on comparative child welfare and children in out-of-home-care (OOHC). The author states that although there is a great deal of evidence about high levels of investment in early childhood services in Sweden, it is not necessarily borne out by figures offered in the paper.
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- 2011
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14. Early impacts of Communities for Children on children and families: findings from a quasi-experimental cohort study.
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Edwards, Ben, Gray, Matthew, Wise, Sarah, Hayes, Alan, Katz, Ilan, Muir, Kristy, and Patulny, Roger
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EARLY intervention (Education) ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CHI-squared test ,CHILD development ,CHILD welfare ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EMPLOYMENT ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,INTERVIEWING ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MATHEMATICAL models ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MOTHERS ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,PARENTING ,RESEARCH funding ,SELF-efficacy ,STATISTICS ,T-test (Statistics) ,DATA analysis ,FAMILY relations ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,CONTROL groups - Abstract
Background: There have been few evaluations of national area-based interventions. This study evaluated the early effects of Communities for Children (CfC) on children and their families and whether the effectiveness differed for more disadvantaged families. Methods: A quasi-experimental cohort study in socioeconomically disadvantaged communities in Australia. Mothers of children aged 2--3 years participated at wave 1; 1488 children in CfC communities and 714 children in comparison communities. Outcome measures included child health and development, family functioning and parenting, and services and community. Results: After controlling for background factors, there were beneficial effects associated with CfC. At wave 3, in CfC areas children had higher receptive vocabulary (mean difference (MD) 0.25, 95% CI --0.02 to 0.51; p=0.07), parents showed less harsh parenting (MD --0.14, 95% CI --0.30 to 0.02; p=0.08) and higher parenting self-efficacy (MD 0.11, 95% CI 0.00 to 0.21; p=0.04). Fewer children living in CfC sites were living in a jobless household (OR 0.56, 95% CI 0.32 to 0.95; p=0.03) but children's physical functioning (MD --0.26, 95% CI --0.53 to 0.00; p=0.05) was worse in CfC sites. For children living in households with mothers with low education there were reduced child injuries requiring medical treatment (MD --0.61, 95% CI --0.07 to --1.13; p=0.03) and increased receptive vocabulary (MD 0.57, 95% CI 0.06 to 1.08; p=0.03). Conclusions: CfC showed some benefits for child receptive vocabulary, parenting and reducing jobless households and two adverse effects. Children living in the most disadvantaged households also benefited. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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15. Child maltreatment reports and Child Protection Service responses during COVID-19: Knowledge exchange among Australia, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Germany, Israel, and South Africa.
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Katz, Ilan, Katz, Carmit, Andresen, Sabine, Bérubé, Annie, Collin-Vezina, Delphine, Fallon, Barbara, Fouché, Ansie, Haffejee, Sadiyya, Masrawa, Nadia, Muñoz, Pablo, Priolo Filho, Sidnei R., Tarabulsy, George, Truter, Elmien, Varela, Natalia, and Wekerle, Christine
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CHILD protection services , *COVID-19 , *CHILD abuse , *INFORMATION sharing , *CHILD welfare , *VIOLENCE prevention , *SAFETY-net health care providers - Abstract
COVID-19 has become a worldwide pandemic impacting child protection services (CPSs) in many countries. With quarantine and social distancing restrictions, school closures, and recreational venues suspended or providing reduced access, the social safety net for violence prevention has been disrupted significantly. Impacts include the concerns of underreporting and increased risk of child abuse and neglect, as well as challenges in operating CPSs and keeping their workforce safe. The current discussion paper explored the impact of COVID-19 on child maltreatment reports and CPS responses by comparing countries using available population data. Information was gathered from researchers in eight countries, including contextual information about the country's demographics and economic situation, key elements of the CPS, and the CPS response to COVID-19. Where available, information about other factors affecting children was also collected. These data informed a discussion about between-country similarities and differences. COVID-19 had significant impact on the operation of every CPS, whether in high- income or low-income countries. Most systems encountered some degree of service disruption or change. Risk factors for children appeared to increase while there were often substantial deficits in CPS responses, and in most countries there was at a temporary decrease in CM reports despite the increased risks to children. The initial data presented and discussed among the international teams pointed to the way COVID-19 has hampered CPS responses and the protection of children more generally in most jurisdictions, highlighting that children appear to have been at greater risk for maltreatment during COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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16. Children dually involved with statutory child protection and juvenile justice in Australia: A developmental cascade framework.
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White, Jordan, Evans, Phillipa, and Katz, Ilan
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CHILD welfare , *JUVENILE delinquency , *HEALTH policy , *THEMATIC analysis , *CRIMINAL justice system , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
• Six key themes emerged that characterise the trajectories of dual involved children. • A Developmental Cascade Framework highlights high-risk pathways for dual involved. • The relationship between risk factors and offending trajectory is context specific. • DST provides theoretical basis for identifying and diverting dual involved. • Cumulative Risk and ACE scores provide an empirical measure of dual involved pathways. Children who experience dual involvement by child protection and juvenile justice statutory systems have poorer life outcomes attributable to higher levels of disadvantage and more complex needs compared to single system involved children. Literature regarding dual involved children in high income, western, and democratic nations are largely based on US studies. Whilst child protection and juvenile justice systems across the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia have somewhat similar legislative systems, cohort outcomes and relationships between risk factors and offending trajectories for dual involved children are influenced by differing legislative, geographic, and demographic contexts. Compared to international literature, significant gaps exist regarding the Australian context. Further, within Australia, there are no evaluated specific responses and/or strategies directed towards supporting this highly vulnerable cohort towards increased long-term positive outcomes. This is the first comprehensive review of Australian studies that examines the characteristics of children who have had dual involvement with juvenile justice and child protection agencies within Australia. Using a thematic analysis twenty-five studies with dual involved samples were analysed, examining the individual, familial, environmental, and systemic factors that contribute to the likelihood of children becoming involved in both child protection and juvenile justice systems within Australia. Six thematic factors emerged that characterised the trajectories of dual involved children: cumulative and destabilising adversity; maltreatment timing and type; offending onset and context; educational disadvantage and disengagement; co-occurring challenges; and First Nations overrepresentation. Our findings are applied to Developmental Systems Theory, extending on previous literature to depict an Australian first developmental cascade framework illustrating the context specific pathways of dual involved children and opportunities for intervention in Australia. The discussion highlights and compares differences between Australian and international contexts with the intention of emphasising key areas for future research, and policy and practice reform. This is important because of the nuanced differences between dual involved characteristics across different legislative and geographic contexts, with particular relevance to the experiences of First Nations children and families. Future research, policy and practice would benefit from continued reforms that focus resources on co-ordinated system responses and cohort specific services; namely, culturally appropriate diversion strategies that promote behavioural de-escalation and educational engagement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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17. Inter-agency indicators of out-of-home-care placement by age 13–14 years: A population record linkage study.
- Author
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Green, Melissa J., Kariuki, Maina, Chilvers, Marilyn, Butler, Merran, Katz, Ilan, Burke, Sharon, Tzoumakis, Stacy, Laurens, Kristin R., Harris, Felicity, and Carr, Vaughan J.
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CHILD protection services , *CHILD welfare , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *GOVERNMENT agencies , *POPULATION - Abstract
Cross-agency administrative data can improve cost-effective triage systems for child protection and other human service delivery. To determine the minimum set of cross-agency indicators that could accurately classify placement in out-of-home-care (OOHC) before age 13–14 years. Participants were 72,079 Australian children (mean age = 13.16 years; SD = 0.37; 51.4% male) and their parents, for whom linked administrative records spanning the years 1994–2016 were available for analysis within the 'New South Wales Child Development Study'. First, a series of logistic regression analyses were conducted to examine associations between cross-agency (health, justice, education) risk indicators and membership of the sub-cohort of 1239 children who had an OOHC placement prior to age 13–14 years, relative to (1) the sub-cohort of 55,473 children who had no previous contact with child protection services, and (2) the sub-cohort of 15,367 children who had been reported to child protection services but had no record of OOHC placement. We then explored the classification characteristics associated with a smaller combination of risk factors, and the utility of specific familial risk factors, for classifying membership of the OOHC subgroup. A combination of six risk indicators evident before OOHC placement can classify children placed in OOHC with approximately 95% accuracy, and the presence of at least four of these risk indicators provides excellent specificity (99.6%). A combination of risk factors observable in administrative datasets held by multiple government agencies may be used to target support services to prevent entry into OOHC for children from vulnerable families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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18. Out-of-home care characteristics associated with childhood educational underachievement, mental disorder, and police contacts in an Australian population sample.
- Author
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O'Hare, Kirstie, Tzoumakis, Stacy, Watkeys, Oliver, Katz, Ilan, Laurens, Kristin R., Butler, Merran, Harris, Felicity, Carr, Vaughan J., and Green, Melissa J.
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AUSTRALIANS , *MENTAL illness , *CHILD welfare , *PHYSICAL abuse , *POLICE , *CHILD care - Abstract
Children in out-of-home care (OOHC) are generally at increased risk of health and social adversities compared to their peers. However, the experiences of children in OOHC are not uniform and their associated health and social indices may vary in relation to characteristics of OOHC placements and child protection contact. To examine associations between a range of characteristics of OOHC placements and child protection contact (e.g., number, type, and age of placement) with educational underachievement, mental disorder, and police contact (as a victim, witness, or person of interest) in childhood. Participants were Australian children drawn from the New South Wales Child Development Study cohort who had been placed in OOHC at least once between the ages of 0–13 years (n = 2082). Logistic regression was used to examine prospective associations of OOHC placement and child protection contact characteristics (type of carer, placement instability, duration and frequency of maltreatment, and amount of time in care) with educational underachievement, mental disorder diagnosis and any type of police contact. Placements with foster carers, greater placement instability, longer and more frequent exposure to maltreatment, and longer time spent in care were each associated with greater likelihood of consequences in all domains of functioning. Children with certain placement characteristics are at higher risk of adverse consequences and should be prioritised for support services. The magnitude of relationships was not uniform across different health and social indices, highlighting the need for holistic, multiagency approaches to support children placed in care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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19. Child protective services during COVID-19 and doubly marginalized children: International perspectives.
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Katz, Carmit, Varela, Natalia, Korbin, Jill E., Najjar, Afnan Attarsh, Cohen, Noa, Bérubé, Annie, Bishop, Ellen, Collin-Vézina, Delphine, Desmond, Alan, Fallon, Barbara, Fouche, Ansie, Haffejee, Sadiyya, Kaawa-Mafigiri, David, Katz, Ilan, Kefalidou, Genovefa, Maguire-Jack, Katie, Massarweh, Nadia, Munir, Akhtar, Munoz, Pablo, and Priolo-Filho, Sidnei
- Subjects
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CHILD protection services , *CHILD welfare , *CHILD abuse , *COVID-19 , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Alongside deficits in children's wellbeing, the COVID-19 pandemic has created an elevated risk for child maltreatment and challenges for child protective services worldwide. Therefore, some children might be doubly marginalized, as prior inequalities become exacerbated and new risk factors arise. To provide initial insight into international researchers' identification of children who might have been overlooked or excluded from services during the pandemic. This study was part of an international collaboration involving researchers from Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Israel, South Africa, Uganda, the UK and the USA. Researchers from each country provided a written narrative in response to the three research questions in focus, which integrated the available data from their countries. Three main questions were explored: 1) Who are the children that were doubly marginalized? 2) What possible mechanisms may be at the root? and 3) In what ways were children doubly marginalized? The international scholars provided information regarding the three questions. A thematic analysis was employed using the intersectional theoretical framework to highlight the impact of children's various identities. The analysis yielded three domains: (1) five categories of doubly marginalized children at increased risk of maltreatment, (2) mechanisms of neglect consisting of unplanned, discriminatory and inadequate actions, and (3) children were doubly marginalized through exclusion in policy and practice and the challenges faced by belonging to vulnerable groups. The COVID-19 pandemic can be used as a case study to illustrate the protection of children from maltreatment during worldwide crises. Findings generated the understanding that child protective systems worldwide must adhere to an intersectionality framework to protect all children and promote quality child protection services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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20. Costs for physical and mental health hospitalizations in the first 13 years of life among children engaged with Child Protection Services.
- Author
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Neil, Amanda L., Islam, Fakhrul, Kariuki, Maina, Laurens, Kristin R., Katz, Ilan, Harris, Felicity, Carr, Vaughan J., and Green, Melissa J.
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CHILD protection services , *CHILD care costs , *MENTAL health , *CHILD welfare , *MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
Longitudinal data on health costs associated with physical and mental conditions are not available for children reported to child protection services. To estimate the costs of hospitalization for physical and mental health conditions by child protection status, including out-of-home-care (OOHC) placement, from birth until 13-years, and to assess the excess costs associated with child protection contact over this period. Australian population cohort of 79,285 children in a multi-agency linkage study. Costs of hospitalization were estimated from birth (if available) using Round 17, National Hospital Cost Data Collection (2012-13; deflated to 2015-16 AUD). Records of the state child protection authority determined contact status. Data were reported separately for children in OOHC. Hospital separations were classified as mental disorder-related if the primary diagnosis was recorded in ICD-10 Chapter V (F00-F99). Hospital separations were more common in children with child protection contact. Physical health care costs per child decreased with age for all children, but were significantly higher for children with contact. Mental health costs per child were always significantly higher for children with contact, with marked increases at 3 ≤ 4 years and 8 ≤ 9 years. Point estimates of annual costs per child were always highest for children with an OOHC placement. The net present value of the excess costs was $3,224 per child until 13- years, discounted at 5 %. Children in contact with child protection services show higher rates and costs for physical and mental health hospitalizations in each of their first 13 years of life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
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