Neumann Krista, Veazie Stephanie, Mason Susan M, Ahern Jennifer, Riddell Corinne A
Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, University of Washington, 1959 NE Pacific St, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
Division of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of California, 2121 Berkeley Way West, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
Child Abuse Negl. 2025 Feb;160:107227. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2024.107227. Epub 2025 Jan 2.
The number of U.S. deaths due to child maltreatment (abuse and neglect) has been increasing over several years. Policy-level interventions that increase household income may be effective interventions for lowering child maltreatment death rates.
To estimate the effect of state-level minimum wages on child maltreatment-related mortality and assess heterogeneity by race and ethnicity.
24,025 child maltreatment-related deaths in U.S. children under 5 years old between 2000 and 2019 were identified via death certificates using International Classification of Diseases codes that (1) identified abuse explicitly and (2) identified injuries predictive of maltreatment ("proxy codes"). State-year maltreatment-related deaths were divided by under-5 population estimates to obtain death rates.
Incidence rate differences (IRD) of the effect of a $1 increase in effective minimum wage on child maltreatment-related death rates, were estimated via a linear regression with state and year fixed effects, robust standard errors, population weights, and appropriate confounder adjustment. Heterogeneity in effect by race and ethnicity was examined using stratified models.
Fully adjusted estimates using combined explicit and proxy codes were close to the null [IRD: -0.05 deaths per 100,000 children overall, 95%CI: (-0.25, 0.16)], with slight, if imprecise, protective estimates among non-Hispanic Black children [IRD: -0.60 deaths per 100,000 children, 95%CI: (-1.28, 0.08)].
This study did not find compelling evidence of a link between minimum wages and child maltreatment-related mortality. Future research should explore other potential policy levers as potential child maltreatment interventions.
美国因虐待和忽视儿童导致的死亡人数在过去几年中一直在增加。提高家庭收入的政策层面干预措施可能是降低虐待儿童死亡率的有效干预措施。
评估州级最低工资对虐待儿童相关死亡率的影响,并按种族和族裔评估异质性。
通过死亡证明,使用国际疾病分类代码,确定了2000年至2019年间美国5岁以下儿童中24,025例与虐待儿童相关的死亡,这些代码(1)明确识别虐待行为,(2)识别可预测虐待行为的伤害(“替代代码”)。将州年度虐待相关死亡人数除以5岁以下人口估计数,以获得死亡率。
通过具有州和年份固定效应、稳健标准误差、人口权重和适当混杂因素调整的线性回归,估计有效最低工资每增加1美元对虐待儿童相关死亡率的发病率差异(IRD)。使用分层模型检查按种族和族裔划分的效应异质性。
使用明确代码和替代代码组合的完全调整估计接近零[IRD:每10万名儿童总体死亡0.05人,95%CI:(-0.25,0.16)],在非西班牙裔黑人儿童中,保护估计值虽不精确但略有下降[IRD:每10万名儿童死亡0.60人,95%CI:(-1.28,0.08)]。
本研究未发现最低工资与虐待儿童相关死亡率之间存在令人信服的联系证据。未来的研究应探索其他潜在的政策杠杆,作为潜在的虐待儿童干预措施。