1 / 21

Bruce MacLaurin Faculty of Social Work University of Calgary

Provincial Forum on Improving Outcomes for Children, Youth & Families Edmonton, Alberta May 27 th , 2009. Using National and Provincial Data to Inform Outcomes for Child Welfare. Bruce MacLaurin Faculty of Social Work University of Calgary. Overview of Presentation.

nervin
Download Presentation

Bruce MacLaurin Faculty of Social Work University of Calgary

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. Provincial Forum on Improving Outcomes for Children, Youth & FamiliesEdmonton, AlbertaMay 27th, 2009 Using National and Provincial Data to Inform Outcomes for Child Welfare Bruce MacLaurin Faculty of Social Work University of Calgary

  2. Overview of Presentation • Overview of the Canadian Incidence Study of Reported Child Abuse and Neglect (CIS-2003) methodology • Understanding the increase in child maltreatment in Canada between 1998 and 2003 • Review key findings of the Alberta Incidence Study of Reported Child Abuse and Neglect (AIS-2003) related to indicators of child welfare outcomes • Examine the relationship to the National Outcomes Indicator Matrix (NOM)

  3. Canadian Incidence Study of Reported Child Abuse and Neglect (CIS-2003) • CIS-2003 Presentation Team: Nico Trocmé, Barbara Fallon, Bruce MacLaurin, Tara Black, Caroline Felstiner, Della Knoke & Catherine Roy

  4. Second national study examining the incidence of reported child abuse and neglect. A national child health surveillance activity initiated by the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC), Injury and Child Maltreatment Section of the Health Surveillance and Epidemiology Division. A partnership with PHAC, provincial and territorial governments, the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society, and Bell Canada. Conducted by a team of researchers from the Universities of McGill, Toronto, Calgary, Quebec, and Memorial. CIS 2003 Background

  5. Objectives of the CIS-2003 • produce national estimates of the incidence of investigated maltreatment in Canada in 2003; • document changes from 1998 to 2003 & explore reasons for the change; • examine variations in types and severity of maltreatment; • explore the role of selected child and family characteristics on the incidence of maltreatment and on key service outcomes.

  6. Used a modified version of the CIS-1998 instrument to document nature of maltreatment, key child and family characteristics and post-investigation services. Data collected directly from investigating social workers (except administrative data used in Quebec). Sample: 11,562 child investigations conducted by 936 child welfare workers in 55 sites across Canada + administrative data on 2,638 investigations in 6 sites in Quebec. Limitations: Limited to reports investigated by child welfare services. Most data from Quebec could not be directly included. Study not designed to make regional comparisons. No follow-up beyond investigation CIS 2003 Methods

  7. Rates and Numbers of Reported & Substantiated Investigations (CIS 2003, excluding Quebec) 45.68 / 1,000 children Unsubstantiated85,969 Suspected28,053 217,319 Substantiated103,297

  8. Increasing Rates of Reports & Substantiated Investigations (CIS 98-03, excluding Quebec) 45.68/1000 86% ► 24.55/1000 47% substan-tiated 125% ► 39% substan-tiated

  9. Rates of reports per child vs. per family (CIS 98-03, excluding Quebec) 86% ► 41%►

  10. Differential Trends by Form of Substantiated Maltreatment: CIS 98/03 (excluding Quebec)

  11. 125% increase in incidence of substantiated maltreatment: Increase in substantiation rates. More siblings per family being investigated. Explosion of reports of emotional maltreatment and exposure to domestic violence. Summary Explanation of Increase in Investigations (CIS-1998-2003)

  12. Alberta Incidence Study of Reported Child Abuse and Neglect (AIS-2003) • AIS-2003 Presentation Team: Bruce MacLaurin, Nico Trocmé, Barbara Fallon, Megan McCormack & Lisa Pitman

  13. Physical Harm Noted For Cases of Substantiated Maltreatment (AIS-2003) 4% of Substantiated Child Maltreatment Investigations Indicate Serious Physical Harm Requiring Medical Treatment

  14. Recurrence of Maltreatment For Cases of Substantiated Maltreatment (AIS-2003) 68% of Substantiated Maltreatment Investigations Have Previous Involvement with ACYS

  15. Placement in Care for Cases of Substantiated Maltreatment (AIS-2003)

  16. Child Functioning Issues for Cases of Substantiated Maltreatment (AIS-2003)

  17. Caregiver Risk Factors For Cases of Substantiated Maltreatment (AIS-2003)

  18. Household Risk Factors in Cases of Substantiated Maltreatment (AIS-2003)

  19. Placement of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Children for Substantiated Cases (AIS-2003)

  20. National Child Welfare Outcomes Indicator Matrix (NOM) Family & Community Support Permanence Well-Being Safety 8 Parenting Risks9 Family Moves & 10 Ethno-cultural Placement Matching 5 Placement6 Moves in care & 7 Time in care 3 School delay4 Child Functioning 1 Recurrence2 Injury Trocme, MacLaurin, Fallon, Shlonsky, Mulcahy & Esposito (2009)

  21. Bruce MacLaurin Assistant Professor Faculty of Social Work University of Calgary Tel: (403) 220-4698 Email: bmaclaur@ucalgary.ca Contact Information

More Related