Not exact matches
These findings approximate those of the more recent National Survey of
Child and Adolescent Well - Being (NSCAW) that 20 percent of children in an investigation for abuse and neglect had a mother who, by either the child welfare worker's or mother's account, was involved with drugs or alcohol; that figure rises to 42 percent for children who are placed into foster care.7 These studies have clearly established a positive relationship between a caregiver's substance abuse and child maltreatment among children in out - of - home care and among children in the general popula
Child and Adolescent Well - Being (NSCAW) that 20 percent of
children in an investigation for abuse and neglect had a mother who, by either the
child welfare worker's or mother's account, was involved with drugs or alcohol; that figure rises to 42 percent for children who are placed into foster care.7 These studies have clearly established a positive relationship between a caregiver's substance abuse and child maltreatment among children in out - of - home care and among children in the general popula
child welfare worker's or mother's account, was involved with drugs or alcohol; that figure rises to 42 percent for
children who are
placed into
foster care.7 These studies have clearly established a positive relationship
between a caregiver's substance abuse and
child maltreatment among children in out - of - home care and among children in the general popula
child maltreatment among
children in out - of - home
care and among
children in the general population.
Parental mental illness Relatively little has been written about the effect of serious and persistent parental mental illness on
child abuse, although many studies show that substantial proportions of mentally ill mothers are living away from their
children.14 Much of the discussion about the effect of maternal mental illness on
child abuse focuses on the poverty and homeless - ness of mothers who are mentally ill, as well as on the behavior problems of their
children — all issues that are correlated with involvement with
child welfare services.15 Jennifer Culhane and her colleagues followed a five - year birth cohort among women who had ever been homeless and found an elevated rate of involvement with
child welfare services and a nearly seven - times - higher rate of having
children placed into
foster care.16 More direct evidence on the relationship
between maternal mental illness and
child abuse
in the general population, however, is strikingly scarce, especially given the 23 percent rate of self - reported major depression
in the previous twelve months among mothers involved with
child welfare services, as shown
in NSCAW.17
Sharing the Baton, Not Passing It: Collaboration
Between Public and Private
Child Welfare Agencies to Reunify Families Spath, Werrbach, & Pine Journal of Community Practice, 16 (4), 2008 View Abstract Presents results from a study of a partnership of two State child welfare agencies and a private child welfare agency aimed at reunifying families whose children have been removed and placed in foster
Child Welfare Agencies to Reunify Families Spath, Werrbach, & Pine Journal of Community Practice, 16 (4), 2008 View Abstract Presents results from a study of a partnership of two State
child welfare agencies and a private child welfare agency aimed at reunifying families whose children have been removed and placed in foster
child welfare agencies and a private
child welfare agency aimed at reunifying families whose children have been removed and placed in foster
child welfare agency aimed at reunifying families whose
children have been removed and
placed in foster care.
Improving
Child Well - Being: Strengthening Collaboration Between the Child Welfare and Health Care Systems Zlotnik, Scribano, Wood, & Noonan (2014) Children's Hospital of Philadelphia's PolicyLab & Safe Place Explores collaborations between child welfare and medical providers and serves as a resource for States seeking to strengthen these collaborations across the continuum of child welfare services, from child protective services reporting and investigation to in - home protective services, foster care, and postreunification serv
Child Well - Being: Strengthening Collaboration
Between the Child Welfare and Health Care Systems Zlotnik, Scribano, Wood, & Noonan (2014) Children's Hospital of Philadelphia's PolicyLab & Safe Place Explores collaborations between child welfare and medical providers and serves as a resource for States seeking to strengthen these collaborations across the continuum of child welfare services, from child protective services reporting and investigation to in - home protective services, foster care, and postreunification se
Between the
Child Welfare and Health Care Systems Zlotnik, Scribano, Wood, & Noonan (2014) Children's Hospital of Philadelphia's PolicyLab & Safe Place Explores collaborations between child welfare and medical providers and serves as a resource for States seeking to strengthen these collaborations across the continuum of child welfare services, from child protective services reporting and investigation to in - home protective services, foster care, and postreunification serv
Child Welfare and Health
Care Systems Zlotnik, Scribano, Wood, & Noonan (2014) Children's Hospital of Philadelphia's PolicyLab & Safe Place Explores collaborations between child welfare and medical providers and serves as a resource for States seeking to strengthen these collaborations across the continuum of child welfare services, from child protective services reporting and investigation to in - home protective services, foster care, and postreunification servi
Care Systems Zlotnik, Scribano, Wood, & Noonan (2014)
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia's PolicyLab & Safe
Place Explores collaborations
between child welfare and medical providers and serves as a resource for States seeking to strengthen these collaborations across the continuum of child welfare services, from child protective services reporting and investigation to in - home protective services, foster care, and postreunification se
between child welfare and medical providers and serves as a resource for States seeking to strengthen these collaborations across the continuum of child welfare services, from child protective services reporting and investigation to in - home protective services, foster care, and postreunification serv
child welfare and medical providers and serves as a resource for States seeking to strengthen these collaborations across the continuum of
child welfare services, from child protective services reporting and investigation to in - home protective services, foster care, and postreunification serv
child welfare services, from
child protective services reporting and investigation to in - home protective services, foster care, and postreunification serv
child protective services reporting and investigation to
in - home protective services,
foster care, and postreunification servi
care, and postreunification services.