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Journal Article

Citation

Sundell K, Vinnerljung B. Child Abuse Negl. 2004; 28(3): 267-287.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Between 1995 and 1997, the Swedish Association of Local Authorities implemented Family Group Conferences (FGC) in 10 local authorities throughout Sweden. This study reports on client outcomes of this implementation.
METHOD: 97 children involved in 66 FGCs between November 1996 and October 1997 were compared with 142 children from a random sample of 104 traditional child protection investigations by the Child Protective Services (CPS). All children were followed for exactly 3 years for future child maltreatment events reported to CPS. Effects were modeled using multiple regressions, controlling for the child's age, gender, family background, and type and severity of problems.
RESULTS: After controlling for initial differences, FGC-children experienced higher rates of re-referral to CPS compared to the group that had been processed in traditional investigations. They were more often re-referred due to abuse, were more often re-referred by the extended family, were longer in out-of-home placements, but tended over time to get less intrusive support from the CPS. FGCs were not related to re-referrals of neglect, of case-closure after 3 years or number of days of received services. The results suggest that the impact of the FGC was scant, accounting for 0-7% of the statistical variance of outcome variables.
CONCLUSIONS: The findings did not support the alleged effectiveness of the FGC model compared to traditional investigations in preventing future maltreatment cases. If these results are confirmed in future research, they serve as a reminder of the necessity to evaluate models based on untested theories or on extrapolations from other countries/cultures, before these models are widely spread in a national practice context. (Abstract Adapted from Source: Child Abuse & Neglect, 2004. Copyright © 2004 by Elsevier Science)

Sweden
Foreign Countries
1990s
Child Abuse Treatment
Child Abuse Victim
Child Abuse Offender
Child Victim
Child Treatment
Victim Treatment
Domestic Violence Treatment
Domestic Violence Victim
Treatment Effectiveness Evaluation
Child Protection
Social Services Intervention
Child Abuse Intervention
Domestic Violence Intervention
03-05

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