1 / 17

Preventable Injury Deaths : A Population-Based Proxy of Child Maltreatment Risk

Preventable Injury Deaths : A Population-Based Proxy of Child Maltreatment Risk. Emily Putnam-Hornstein, PhD Center for Social Services Research University of California, Berkeley. background. Maltreated children known to child protective services.

etenia
Download Presentation

Preventable Injury Deaths : A Population-Based Proxy of Child Maltreatment Risk

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Preventable Injury Deaths:A Population-Based Proxy of Child Maltreatment Risk Emily Putnam-Hornstein, PhD Center for Social Services Research University of California, Berkeley

  2. background Maltreated children known to child protective services Maltreated children not knownto child protective services

  3. motivation • CPS: a raciallybiased sample of maltreated children? • a population-based metric of child maltreatment risk / child welfare service needs • implications for how and where we intervene to reduce racial disparities…as well as what our short-term expectations should be

  4. this study • uses data from two public surveillance systems as a means of assessing bias in one source (CPS data), using the more complete data found in the other (vital injury death records) • exploits variations in injury fatality rates as a means of quantifying bias in the racial distribution of maltreatment victims identified by CPS • hypothesized that racial variability in excess injury death would be observed, but absent widespread bias on the part of CPS, consistent counts of substantiations for each excess death

  5. child injury deaths A mortality-based standard for evaluating parental behavior may be the closest we can get to “culture-free” definitions of neglect and abuse. (S.R. Johannson, 1987)

  6. why all injury fatalities? • maltreatment-related, inflicted injuries are severely undercounted in death records • cannot capture racial bias in one data source, using another source potentially corrupted by the same bias • unintentional and intentional child injury fatalities are falsely dichotomized – the outcome is the same • unintentional injury fatalities are largely preventable, occur in the home, frequently reflect inadequate caregiving and supervision (i.e., neglect), accompanied by the same risk factors as intentional injury deaths

  7. injury mortality rates maltreatment rates population estimates data death statistical master files year, age, race/ethnicity, manner/mechanism of death substantiation records year, age, race/ethnicity, maltreatment substantiations bridged-race postcensal est. year, age, race/ethnicity

  8. maltreatment rates (per 1,000) &injury death rates (per 100,000) 21.6 per 1,000 20.7 per 1,000 18.8 per 100,000 16.9 per 100,000 62.8 per 1,000 7.0 per 1,000 45.5 per 100,000 12.3 per 100,000

  9. excess injury deaths • rates of excess (or preventable) injury mortality were derived based on the difference between each racial group’s rate of injury death and that of an achievable baseline semi-arbitrary achievable death rate excess deaths ? ? Since, by its very definition, the “achievable death rate” is the upper bound estimate of some unknown fraction of injury deaths that were actually unavoidable…two other baselines were also considered.

  10. excess injury deaths

  11. substantiations per excess death • definition: • the number of substantiated cases of maltreatment for every injury death in excess of a specified baseline rate • it was posited that in the absence of widespread substantiation bias on the part of CPS, consistent numbers of substantiated cases for each excess death would be observed across racial groups • differences in the number of substantiations per excess death were treated as an indication that CPS had substantiated a racially biased sample of the full population of children at risk of maltreatment / in need of child welfare services

  12. substantiations per excess death

  13. summary • established an “achievable” baseline rate of injury death • computed rates of excess death • alternative baselines set at 50% and 75% of this rate • computed the corresponding number of substantiated allegations of maltreatment associated with each excess death

  14. findings • findings from this population-level analysis align with other recent research suggesting that racial disparities in rates of substantiated maltreatment arise from real group-level differences in risk • per excess death, Black and Native American children had rates of substantiated maltreatment that were equivalent to or lower than White children

  15. qualifications and limitations • ecological analysis • racial bias unlikely to operate on such a large scale as to explain observed disparities • method for determining how many injury deaths are preventable • relied on a rate of death that was achieved, findings held under alternative specifications • baseline rates of random deaths may differ due to non-parental risk factors • excluded transportation-related deaths, findings held • variation in the timeliness and/or quality of medical interventions to prevent death • research suggests most injury fatality victims are declared dead prior to arrival at ER/hospital

  16. conclusions? • to date, efforts to reduce racial disparities have been oriented around an understanding that the overrepresentation of Black and Native American children among victims of maltreatment originated from CPS system and worker bias • efforts to reduce racial disparities will continue to fall short if intervention strategies ignore the social and economic factors that place some children at far greater risk of abuse and neglect than others

  17. eputnamhornstein@berkeley.eduhttp://cssr.berkeley.edu/cwscmsreports/eputnamhornstein@berkeley.eduhttp://cssr.berkeley.edu/cwscmsreports/ Thank you to my colleagues at the Center for Social Services Research and the California Department of Social Services Support for this and other child maltreatment/mortality research was provided by the HF Guggenheim Foundation

More Related