Home Visiting and Child Welfare Involvement: A Matched Comparison Group Study.

Child Maltreat

Prenatal-to-3 Policy Impact Center, Peabody College of Education & Human Development, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study is a large quasi-experimental analysis of home visiting programs and their impact on child maltreatment during a child's first two years, comparing 8,796 participating families to 8,796 similar non-participating families.
  • Despite HV families having higher odds of being investigated for maltreatment by their second birthday, they also have lower odds of those investigations being substantiated.
  • The findings stress the need to account for surveillance bias and consider both substantiated and unsubstantiated investigations when assessing the effects of home visiting on child maltreatment.

Article Abstract

The present study is one of the largest quasi-experimental studies to date on the effects of home visiting on documented child maltreatment during a child's first two years of life. In this matched comparison group study, we compare 8796 families that participated in a home visiting program (HV families) to 8796 similar non-participating families (non-HV families) selected from birth records using Coarsened Exact Matching. Using sequential logistic regression, we identify that HV families have significantly higher odds of experiencing a child maltreatment investigation by their child's second birthday compared to non-HV families; however, among those that were investigated, HV families have significantly lower odds of having their first investigation substantiated for maltreatment. Overall, HV families do not differ significantly from non-HV families in the odds of experiencing a substantiated investigation over 2 years. We share implications for considering surveillance bias, and we highlight the importance of including both substantiated and unsubstantiated investigations when studying the effects of home visiting on documented child maltreatment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/10775595241268227DOI Listing

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