Assessing risk to determine the need for services

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  • Cited by (52)

    • Decision-making on out-of-home care: The case of Flanders

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    • Can we measure risk in home visitation? An examination of the predictive validity of the Healthy Families Parenting Inventory (HFPI)

      2022, Children and Youth Services Review
      Citation Excerpt :

      Accordingly, an increase score on these subscales indicates an increase in a family’s knowledge and utilization of community resources and supports. This finding, although unexpected, aligns with existing literature regarding the multidimensional nature of maltreatment risk, and illustrates the potential for direct and indirect surveillance bias to artificially influence predictive relationships (Chaffin & Baird, 2006; Olds, 2005; DePanfilis & Zuravin, 2001). For families enrolled in early childhood home visitation programs, an increase on these identified subscales may suggest activities in the home that increase scrutiny by mandatory reporters such as creating more contact with networks of other potential reporters.

    • Ongoing child welfare services: Understanding the relationship of worker and organizational characteristics to service provision

      2018, Child Abuse and Neglect
      Citation Excerpt :

      Child characteristics including gender (male), children with multiple functioning concerns, and younger children significantly predict increased likelihood of the family receiving ongoing child welfare services (DePanfilis & Zuravin, 2001; Johnson-Reid, 2002; Jud et al., 2012). Caregivers with multiple functioning concerns, few social supports, financial issues, multiple household moves, and who have multiple caregivers in the home are more likely to receive ongoing services (DePanfilis & Zuravin, 2001; Jud et al., 2012). Case factors such as professional referral source (Rossi, Schuerman, & Budde, 1999), risk-only investigations (Jud et al., 2012), maltreatment type (DePanfilis & Zuravin, 2001; Johnson-Reid, 2002; Jud et al., 2012; Rivaux, James, & Wittenstrom, 2008), and substantiated allegations (DePanfilis & Zuravin, 2001) predicted higher rates of transfer to ongoing services.

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