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Substantiation and Recidivism

Authors
Drake, B.Jonson-Reid, M.Way, I.Chung, S.
Issue Date
Nov-2003
Publisher
American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children
Keywords
Child welfare; Harm/evidence model; Substantiation; Victim recidivism
Citation
Child Maltreatment, v.8, no.4, pp 248 - 260
Pages
13
Journal Title
Child Maltreatment
Volume
8
Number
4
Start Page
248
End Page
260
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/26252
DOI
10.1177/1077559503258930
ISSN
1077-5595
Abstract
This article reports rates of recidivism among initially substantiated and initially unsubstantiated child maltreatment events to determine if substantiation status is associated with higher risk of recidivism. This is an important question given recent concerns that unsubstantiated cases may have as high or almost as high a risk of recidivism as do substantiated cases. The data are analyzed at both the victim level and the case level, divided by type of maltreatment, and followed for 4.5 years. The data used are administrative and combine a series of state databases with census data. Analyses are performed at the bivariate and multivariate (Cox proportional hazards model) levels. The main finding is that unsubstantiated cases are at high risk for recidivism, in many cases as high a risk as substantiated cases. Implications for practice, policy, and research are presented with a focus on the importance of providing preventative services to unsubstantiated cases.
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