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Journal Article

Citation

Wilson D, Koziol-McLain J, Garrett N, Sharma P. Int. J. Qual. Health Care 2010; 22(4): 283-293.

Affiliation

School of Public Health and Psychological Studies, AUT University, Private Bag 92 006, Auckland 1142, New Zealand.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/intqhc/mzq025

PMID

20508018

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Refine instrument for auditing hospital-based child abuse and neglect violence intervention programmes prior to field-testing. DESIGN: /st> A modified Delphi study to identify and rate items and domains indicative of an effective and quality child abuse and neglect intervention programme. Experts participated in four Delphi rounds: two surveys, a one-day workshop and the opportunity to comment on the penultimate instrument. SETTING: New Zealand. PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-four experts in the field of care and protection of children. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Items with panel agreement >/=85% and mean importance rating >/=4.0 (scale from 1 (not important) to 5 (very important)). RESULTS: There was high-level consensus on items across Rounds 1 and 2 (89% and 85%, respectively). In Round 3 an additional domain (safety and security) was agreed upon and cultural issues, alert systems for children at risk, and collaboration among primary care, community, non-government and government agencies were discussed. The final instrument included nine domains ('policies and procedures', 'safety and security', 'collaboration', 'cultural environment', 'training of providers', 'intervention services', 'documentation' 'evaluation' and 'physical environment') and 64 items. CONCLUSIONS: The refined instrument represents the hallmarks of an ideal child abuse and neglect programme given current knowledge and experience. The instrument enables rigorous evaluations of hospital-based child abuse and neglect intervention programmes for quality improvement and benchmarking with other programmes.


Language: en

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