The number of children referred to the English child protection system and the numbers receiving home-based intervention or placed in out of home care have been rising in recent years. It is difficult to judge whether these changes indicate that thresholds for intervention are low or high, as we know little about the severity of the maltreatment that draws children into the child protection system in England. This study compared the histories, circumstances and pathways of children receiving quasi-compulsory home-based support (under a child protection plan) to those for children ever placed in out of home care. It collected detailed data from the social workers of 390 children and is the first UK study to include a standardised measure of ...
This project focuses on the consequences of decisions to reunify children who had entered the looked...
Abstract This paper reports on national estimates for past year child maltreatment from a national h...
Research evidence increasingly suggests that young children in residential care without parents are ...
The number of children referred to the English child protection system and the numbers receiving hom...
Out-of-home placement may not always protect children against violence or maltreatment. We investiga...
Based on a Freedom of Information request with data from 75 per cent of all English children’s servi...
Previous research has highlighted the poor educational attainment of children in out-of-home care, u...
Previous research has highlighted the poor educational attainment of children in out-of-home care, u...
BackgroundOver the past decades, increased knowledge about childhood abuse and trauma have prompted ...
Children less than one year of age are a vulnerable population. Injury, and child abuse and neglect ...
Objective. To study the relationship between disabling conditions and registration for child abuse a...
Objective: To provide reliable measures of the prevalence of all forms of child maltreatment in the ...
Scotland’s systems of childcare are unusual; a hearing involving three trained lay people makes deci...
One of the major challenges currently being faced by out-of-home care services is the issue of place...
BACKGROUND: Children in out-of-home care (OOHC) are generally at increased risk of health and social...
This project focuses on the consequences of decisions to reunify children who had entered the looked...
Abstract This paper reports on national estimates for past year child maltreatment from a national h...
Research evidence increasingly suggests that young children in residential care without parents are ...
The number of children referred to the English child protection system and the numbers receiving hom...
Out-of-home placement may not always protect children against violence or maltreatment. We investiga...
Based on a Freedom of Information request with data from 75 per cent of all English children’s servi...
Previous research has highlighted the poor educational attainment of children in out-of-home care, u...
Previous research has highlighted the poor educational attainment of children in out-of-home care, u...
BackgroundOver the past decades, increased knowledge about childhood abuse and trauma have prompted ...
Children less than one year of age are a vulnerable population. Injury, and child abuse and neglect ...
Objective. To study the relationship between disabling conditions and registration for child abuse a...
Objective: To provide reliable measures of the prevalence of all forms of child maltreatment in the ...
Scotland’s systems of childcare are unusual; a hearing involving three trained lay people makes deci...
One of the major challenges currently being faced by out-of-home care services is the issue of place...
BACKGROUND: Children in out-of-home care (OOHC) are generally at increased risk of health and social...
This project focuses on the consequences of decisions to reunify children who had entered the looked...
Abstract This paper reports on national estimates for past year child maltreatment from a national h...
Research evidence increasingly suggests that young children in residential care without parents are ...