School of Social Work, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America; Suzanne Dworak-Peck School of Social Work, University of Southern California, United States of America.
Suzanne Dworak-Peck School of Social Work, University of Southern California, United States of America.
Child Abuse Negl. 2022 Aug;130(Pt 4):105446. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2021.105446. Epub 2022 Feb 8.
Children are reported for maltreatment during infancy at elevated rates; research has established persistent racial/ethnic differences in the likelihood of reporting to the child protection system (CPS).
To model the influence of race/ethnicity and community disadvantage in CPS reporting during infancy.
PARTICIPANTS/SETTING: A population-based dataset consisting of more than 1.2 million children born in California between 2012 and 2014. Vital birth records were probabilistically linked to administrative CPS records. American Community Survey data were used to measure community disadvantage.
For each child, we coded sociodemographic information from the birth record, assigned the child to a community using their residential address at birth, and captured maltreatment reports from child protection records. We employed a modified Poisson regression model to examine an infant's likelihood of being reported to CPS by race/ethnicity across levels of community disadvantage and after adjusting for individual-level covariates.
Infants born in neighborhoods with the most concentrated disadvantage were reported to CPS at 7 times the rate of children born in the most advantaged neighborhoods (12.3% vs. 1.8%). After adjusting for individual-level covariates, we found that both Black and Hispanic infants born on public insurance were significantly less likely than White infants to be reported for maltreatment overall - and Black and Hispanic infants had a statistically equivalent or lower likelihood of reporting at the two extremes of neighborhood disadvantage. Among privately insured families, Hispanic infants continued to have a lower likelihood of reporting, but Black infants were reported at higher rates than White infants. This Black-White difference persisted in the most advantaged neighborhoods, but disappeared in the most disadvantaged neighborhoods.
Capturing individual-level differences in socioeconomic status and associated risk factors is critical to understanding sources of racial/ethnic differences in CPS reporting, including when there is unwarranted variation or disparate treatment. Our findings suggest an elevated likelihood of maltreatment reporting among privately insured Black infants not explained by differences in observed risk or neighborhood, but no such differences were documented for Black or Hispanic infants on public insurance.
据报道,儿童在婴儿期受到虐待的比例较高;研究已经确定,在向儿童保护系统(CPS)报告的可能性方面,存在持续的种族/民族差异。
建立婴儿期 CPS 报告中种族/民族和社区劣势的影响模型。
参与者/设置:一个基于人群的数据集,由 2012 年至 2014 年期间在加利福尼亚州出生的 120 多万名儿童组成。生命出生记录被概率链接到行政 CPS 记录。使用美国社区调查数据来衡量社区劣势。
对于每个孩子,我们从出生记录中编码社会人口统计信息,根据他们在出生时的居住地址将孩子分配到一个社区,并从儿童保护记录中捕获虐待报告。我们使用修正泊松回归模型来检查婴儿在社区劣势的各个层次上被 CPS 报告的可能性,以及在调整个体水平协变量后。
在劣势最集中的社区中出生的婴儿向 CPS 报告的比例是在最有利社区中出生的婴儿的 7 倍(12.3%对 1.8%)。在调整个体水平协变量后,我们发现,在公共保险下出生的黑人和西班牙裔婴儿与白人婴儿相比,整体上因虐待而被报告的可能性要小得多-而且黑人和西班牙裔婴儿在社区劣势的两个极端情况下,报告的可能性具有统计学上的等效或更低。在私人保险家庭中,西班牙裔婴儿继续报告的可能性较低,但黑人和白人婴儿的报告率较高。这种黑人和白人之间的差异在最有利的社区中持续存在,但在最不利的社区中消失了。
捕捉社会经济地位和相关风险因素的个体差异对于理解 CPS 报告中种族/民族差异的来源至关重要,包括在存在不必要的差异或差异待遇时。我们的研究结果表明,私人保险黑人婴儿的虐待报告可能性较高,这无法用观察到的风险或社区差异来解释,但在公共保险的黑人或西班牙裔婴儿中没有发现这种差异。