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Journal Article

Citation

King G, Trocme N, Thatte N. Child Maltreat. 2003; 8(3): 173-182.

Affiliation

Department of Biobehavioral Health, Penn State University, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

12934634

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Previous studies on child maltreatment reporting have focused mainly on one level of substantiation. This article analyzes factors influencing the multitiered substantiation process. METHOD: The 1993 Third National Incidence Study (NIS-3) data of substantiated and non-substantiated reported incidents (N=7,263) of maltreatment were analyzed. Substantiation was classified into three categories: unfounded, indicated, and founded. Independent variables included demographic characteristics, case-processing variables, and maltreatment characteristics. DATA ANALYSIS: Bivariate and multiple logistic regression (MLR) analyses were calculated to determine whether demographic and case processing variables predicted unfounded or founded/indicated dispositions. Second-level analysis examined demographic, case processing, and maltreatment characteristics as predictors of founded or indicated status. RESULTS: These results showed that 60.2% of CPS investigations conducted were evaluated as unfounded, about 22% were categorized as founded, and 17% were classified as indicated. In the MLR analysis for the first level of substantiation, case processing variables were highly significant predictors of founded/indicated status. In the second-level substantiation MLR model, cases in the mid-range income level (dollars 15,000-29,999) had a lower probability (adjusted OR = .58, p = .02) of being founded than those of less than dollars 15,000, and reports involving Hispanic children (OR = 3.04, p = .05) were more likely than the "all other" race-ethnic social classification to have been substantiated as founded. CONCLUSIONS: This analysis of NIS-3 data suggests that a three-tiered rather than a two-tiered system is a more accurate representation of the CPS substantiation process. Further analysis of substantiation patterns is required to provide a basis for developing more effective investigation systems.


Language: en

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