Violence Exposure: Co-Occurring Safety Concerns and Investigation Outcomes

Date

2024

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Child Maltreatment

Abstract

Childhood exposure to domestic violence (CEDV) poses significant risks to children’s safety and wellbeing, yet its prevalence and impact on child protection outcomes remains understudied. This study examined administrative data for child protection investigations in Los Angeles County, California between January 2018 and March 2021 to determine the prevalence of CEDV safety concerns, associated case characteristics, and child protection outcomes (case openings and foster care placements). Results indicated that 5.9% of investigations had CEDV concerns and CEDV investigations represented 17.9% of placements. Investigations with CEDV concerns had higher co-occurring indicated safety concerns than investigations without, including substance abuse (31.1%) and mental health (14.2%). Investigation outcomes for those with CEDV concerns included the substantiation of more than one individual (36.6%), while 28.4% resulted in case openings (without placement) and 30.2% resulted in placements. The study underscores the importance of moving beyond punitive frameworks and exploring the use evidence-based service planning to address the complex needs of families affected by CEDV.

Description

Keywords

children's exposure to violence, domestic violence, co-occurrence, child protection, safety concerns, service planning

Citation

Rebbe, R., Victor, B., Cuccaro-Alamin, S., & Palmer, L. (2024). Child Protection Responses to Domestic Violence Exposure: Co-Occurring Safety Concerns and Investigation Outcomes. Child Maltreatment, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/10775595241301085

DOI