Measures utilized include a 138 - item survey, archival
data on child abuse and neglect from the South Carolina Department of Social Services and ICD -9-CM coded hospital inpatient and emergency room discharge.
Data for the implementation and impact studies will be collected from a variety of sources, including interviews with parents; observations of the home environment; observed interactions of parents and children; direct assessments of children's development; observations of home visitors in their work with families during home visits; logs, observations, and interviews with home visitors, supervisors, and program administrators; program model documentation from program developers, grantees, and local sites; and administrative
data on child abuse, health care use, maternal health, birth outcomes, and employment and earnings.
Strengthening Texas Courts for the Safety, Permanency, and Well Being of Children in Foster Care (PDF - 472 KB) Task Force on Child Protection Case Management and Reporting, Supreme Court of Texas (2006) Summarizes challenges to unified data collection, sharing, and analysis among judges who hear child protection cases in Texas, discusses progress toward a uniform statewide system for managing and tracking
data on child abuse and neglect cases, and suggests best practices for measuring and improving court performance.
Summarizes challenges to unified data collection, sharing, and analysis among judges who hear child protection cases in Texas, discusses progress toward a uniform statewide system for managing and tracking
data on child abuse and neglect cases, and suggests best practices for measuring and improving court performance.
Not exact matches
They estimated the total lifetime economic burden of
child sexual
abuse in the United States to be $ 9.3 billion, based
on child sexual
abuse data from 2015.
For
data about wars, there are many databases that estimate war deaths, and in recent eras, governments and social scientists have tracked just about every aspect of life, so we really can get a clear view of things like
child abuse, spousal
abuse, rape and so
on.
Since no concrete, national
data exist
on allegations of
child sex
abuse by school employees, the project was also based
on searches through archives, wire service clippings, and computer databases of thousands of news...
One post
on CEI's blog, written at the time when the Jerry Sandusky
child abuse scandal was unfurling in the national media, accused Mann of «molesting
data»
on climate change.
The original study assessed the effects of
abuse and household dysfunction during childhood
on long - term health and quality - of - life outcomes.22 A subanalysis of these
data by Dube et al23 demonstrated that adults who were exposed to IPV as
children were 6 times more likely to be emotionally
abused, 4.8 times more likely to be physically
abused, and 2.6 times more likely to be sexually
abused than
children who were not exposed to IPV.
Indeed, Jay Belsky incorporated all of these risk factors into his process model of parenting, 11 and
data from multiple studies support links to
child well - being.12 In an experiment
on the effectiveness of a program for low - birth - weight infants, Lawrence Berger and Jeanne Brooks - Gunn examined the relative effect of both socioeconomic status and parenting
on child abuse and neglect (as measured by ratings of health providers who saw
children in the treatment and control groups six times over the first three years of life, not by review of administrative
data) and found that both factors contributed significantly and uniquely to the likelihood that a family was perceived to engage in some form of
child maltreatment.13 The link between parenting behaviors and
child maltreatment suggests that interventions that promote positive parenting behaviors would also contribute to lower rates of
child maltreatment among families served.
Prior research also provides insight into how paternal risk factors such as domestic violence, incarceration, multipartner fertility, and substance
abuse can decrease an unmarried father's likelihood of being involved with his
children.1, 2 Drawing
on survey
data from unmarried Texas parents, CFRP builds
on these findings in several ways: 1) examining the intersection and associations between the parental relationship, father involvement, paternal support, and AOP signing, 2) investigating how each of these topics is informed by a web of personal, interpersonal, and environmental factors, and 3) approximating how the parental relationship, father involvement, and paternal support are likely to change over time.
The
data collected include information
on outcomes of
child abuse reports, numbers availing of family support services, numbers and categories of
children in care, numbers availing of youth homelessness services, and services for separated
children seeking asylum.
Design Options for Home Visiting Evaluation Measurement Brief: Selecting
Data Collection Measures for MIECHV Benchmarks (PDF - 393 KB) U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration (2011) Focuses
on the selection and development of performance measures or indicators to achieve an array of goals such as improving maternal and
child health, parenting practices, school readiness, and the prevention of
child abuse and neglect as they relate to legislatively mandated benchmark areas.
Presents sources of
data on the
abuse and neglect of
children in foster care and other out - of - home care settings, such as residential or institutional facilities.
Investing in the Future of L.A.'s Most At - Risk
Children: Data on Needs and Resources for Preschool Children Involved With Child Welfare and Probation (PDF - 734 KB) McCroskey & Nadybal (2007) Investigates the current and projected number of preschool children in Los Angeles County at risk of child abuse and neglect, and examines the capacity of local communities» child care
Children:
Data on Needs and Resources for Preschool
Children Involved With Child Welfare and Probation (PDF - 734 KB) McCroskey & Nadybal (2007) Investigates the current and projected number of preschool children in Los Angeles County at risk of child abuse and neglect, and examines the capacity of local communities» child care
Children Involved With
Child Welfare and Probation (PDF - 734 KB) McCroskey & Nadybal (2007) Investigates the current and projected number of preschool children in Los Angeles County at risk of child abuse and neglect, and examines the capacity of local communities» child care sys
Child Welfare and Probation (PDF - 734 KB) McCroskey & Nadybal (2007) Investigates the current and projected number of preschool
children in Los Angeles County at risk of child abuse and neglect, and examines the capacity of local communities» child care
children in Los Angeles County at risk of
child abuse and neglect, and examines the capacity of local communities» child care sys
child abuse and neglect, and examines the capacity of local communities»
child care sys
child care systems.
The most recent report entitled
Child Maltreatment 2014 was released on January 25, 2016 and presents national data about child abuse and neglect known to child protective services agencies in the United States during federal fiscal year
Child Maltreatment 2014 was released
on January 25, 2016 and presents national
data about
child abuse and neglect known to child protective services agencies in the United States during federal fiscal year
child abuse and neglect known to
child protective services agencies in the United States during federal fiscal year
child protective services agencies in the United States during federal fiscal year 2014.
The National
Child Abuse and Neglect
Data Systems (NCANDS) glossary in
Child Maltreatment 2007 provides the backbone to the following categories of traumatic stress provided by the National
Child Traumatic Stress Network (Core Clinical Characteristics form dated 9/2007): [To see the definition, click
on the category.]
The National
Child Abuse and Neglect
Data System (NCANDS)
Child File includes information
on all US
children with a confirmed report of maltreatment, totaling 5689900
children (2004 - 2011).
Fact: «The sheer prevalence of the problem of violence and the dynamics surrounding it make it clear any assumptions about equal partnership in these cases are out of the question... the majority of women never report the assaults or in fact ever tell anyone about it (Johnson, 1996) and thus may not be believed if the first time the issue is raised is at the point of separation... may avoid going to court out of fear of retaliation, a fear which is not unfounded given the
data on the escalation of violence at separation... agree to whatever the husband wants in an attempt to pacify him... as an exchange for custody... may appear unstable or emotional while their batterers are perceived as confident, rational and economically secure (Rosnes, 1997)... all the research flies in the face of what Rosnes argues is presently happening in the courts:»... judges assume that wife
abuse is not necessarily damaging to a
child, and that being violent does not necessarily affect a father's parenting ability....
Design, Setting, and Participants The National
Child Abuse and Neglect
Data System (NCANDS)
Child File includes information
on all US
children with a confirmed report of maltreatment, totaling 5689900
children (2004 - 2011).
The
data were provided by the National Data Archive on Child Abuse and Negl
data were provided by the National
Data Archive on Child Abuse and Negl
Data Archive
on Child Abuse and Neglect.
The Global status report
on violence prevention 2014, which reflects
data from 133 countries, is the first report of its kind to assess national efforts to address interpersonal violence, namely
child maltreatment, youth violence, intimate partner and sexual violence, and elder
abuse.
The current study used administrative
data from state
child welfare agencies to examine the impact of Early Head Start (EHS)
on documented
abuse and neglect among
children from seven of the original seventeen programs in the national EHS randomized controlled trial.
Summary: (To include comparison groups, outcomes, measures, notable limitations) The study investigated treatment fidelity and working alliance in the Parent Management Training — Oregon Model (PMTO) utilizing longitudinal
data from the National Institute
on Drug
Abuse study (Forgatch & deGarmo, 2011; Ogden & Hagen, 2008), and investigated how these relate to
children's externalizing problem behaviors, as reported by parents and teachers.
Data was collected
on future referrals for
child abuse or neglect through the state
child protective services (CPS) system.
Incidence, gender, & false allegations of
child abuse,
data on 84 parental alienation syndrome cases.
The authors of «Sex With
Children: Comment
on Rind, Tromobitch, and Bauserman» (1998) stated that Rind, Bauserman and Tromovitch misrepresented the original
data cited in the sex
abuse meta - analysis:
Child Abuse & Neglect Offers resources on child abuse and neglect, including definitions, identification of signs and symptoms, statistics and data, risk and protective factors, perpetrators, the impact of abuse on individuals and society, and fatali
Child Abuse & Neglect Offers resources on child abuse and neglect, including definitions, identification of signs and symptoms, statistics and data, risk and protective factors, perpetrators, the impact of abuse on individuals and society, and fatali
Abuse & Neglect Offers resources
on child abuse and neglect, including definitions, identification of signs and symptoms, statistics and data, risk and protective factors, perpetrators, the impact of abuse on individuals and society, and fatali
child abuse and neglect, including definitions, identification of signs and symptoms, statistics and data, risk and protective factors, perpetrators, the impact of abuse on individuals and society, and fatali
abuse and neglect, including definitions, identification of signs and symptoms, statistics and
data, risk and protective factors, perpetrators, the impact of
abuse on individuals and society, and fatali
abuse on individuals and society, and fatalities.
Michigan's support for home visiting is especially critical, given that the number of confirmed victims of
child abuse and neglect in the state rose 16 percent between 2000 and 2008, according to the Annie E. Casey Foundation's Kids Count
Data Book 2009, a profile of the status of
children on a national and state - by - state basis.