A Multilevel Analysis of Individual and Community Factors Associated With Case Dispositions Following Child Maltreatment Investigations

Author:

Barboza-Salerno Gia E.1ORCID,Steinke Hannah2,Meshelemiah Jacquelyn C.A.2,Stanek Charis2,Duhany Sharefa3ORCID,Cash Scottye2

Affiliation:

1. College of Public Health and College of Social Work, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA

2. College of Social Work, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA

3. College of Public Health, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA

Abstract

Understanding service disposition pathways is critical to provide deeper insight into why certain subgroups of the population are at risk for recurrent Child Protective Services (CPS) involvement and may highlight disparities across groups or geographic areas. Using the Decision-Making Ecology Framework as a lens, the present study examines whether service disposition pathways are influenced by risk assessment, safety concerns, child age, maltreatment type, previous CPS involvement, and/or county-level structural vulnerability. We linked administrative data from New Mexico’s Department of Children, Youth and Families (DCYF) to data from the American Community Survey. Multilevel models examining associations between case ( N = 12,960) and county ( N = 33) characteristics revealed that both case (age, maltreatment type, risk/safety assessments, previous CPS involvement) and county-level factors (transportation and housing) were associated with service disposition. Additionally, we observed considerable variation at the county level in both the provision of services and the relationship between risk assessment and service provision. By linking different factors of the decision-making process in child welfare cases to intervention strategies, the analysis reveals that the perception of risk can vary based on geographical context resulting in different outcomes for families who have similar risks but different county-level vulnerabilities.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference55 articles.

1. Administration on Children, Youth, and Families [ACF]. (2017). Child and family services reviews, New Mexico, final report 2015. U.S. Department of health and human services, administration for children and families, administration on children, Youth and families, children’s bureau. https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/documents/cb/nm-cfsr-r3-final.pdf

2. Examining Spatial Regimes of Child Maltreatment Allegations in a Social Vulnerability Framework

3. Variability and stability in child maltreatment risk across time and space and its association with neighborhood social & housing vulnerability in New Mexico: A bayesian space-time model

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