Campbell Kristine A, Laskey Antoinette L, Lindberg Daniel M, Henry M Katherine, Vaughn Porcia, Anderst James D, Letson Megan M, Bachim Angela N, Harper Nancy S, Coombs Carmen M, Frasier Lori D, Wood Joanne N
Department of Pediatrics, University of Utah, Center for Safe and Healthy Families, Primary Children's Hospital, Salt Lake City, UT, United States of America.
Department of Emergency Medicine, The Kempe Center for the Prevention & Treatment of Child Abuse & Neglect, University of Colorado School of Medicine, 12401 E. 17th Ave. Mailstop B-215, Aurora, CO 80045, United States of America.
Child Abuse Negl. 2025 Sep;167:107608. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2025.107608. Epub 2025 Aug 8.
The association between child abuse pediatric (CAP) assessments and child welfare outcomes is unknown.
To determine the association between a CAP determination of the likelihood of physical abuse and change in child placement. We hypothesized that child race would be associated with CAP determination of abuse likelihood and child welfare outcomes.
Children under age ten years with in-person CAP consultation and referral to child protective services for suspected physical abuse at a U.S. pediatric referral center participating in CAPNET, a CAP research network, from 02/2021 to 01/2023.
We created a series of generalized estimating equations clustered by site, adding covariate blocks representing child characteristics, clinical case factors, and social risk indicators to understand the probability of placement change after CAP consultation.
Of 3732 eligible children, 950 (25.5 %) experienced a placement change around a CAP consultation for physical abuse. Adjusting for site, placement change was 28.7 % (25.7-31.8 %) more likely for children with a CAP determination of a high v. lower likelihood of abuse and 6.7 % (3.1-10.4 %) more likely for children of Black/Indigenous v. other race (p < 0.001). These differences persisted with attenuation in fully adjusted models. There was no significant association between CAP determination and child race.
CAP assessment of physical abuse likelihood is strongly associated with the probability of change in child placement. While not associated with CAP assessment of abuse likelihood, Black or Indigenous race is associated with increased probability of placement change even after adjusting for child, case, and social risk factors.
儿童虐待儿科(CAP)评估与儿童福利结果之间的关联尚不清楚。
确定CAP对身体虐待可能性的判定与儿童安置变化之间的关联。我们假设儿童种族与CAP对虐待可能性的判定以及儿童福利结果相关。
2021年2月至2023年1月期间,在美国一家参与CAP研究网络CAPNET的儿科转诊中心,接受面对面CAP咨询并因疑似身体虐待被转介至儿童保护服务机构的10岁以下儿童。
我们创建了一系列按地点聚类的广义估计方程,添加了代表儿童特征、临床病例因素和社会风险指标的协变量块,以了解CAP咨询后安置变化的概率。
在3732名符合条件的儿童中,950名(25.5%)在围绕身体虐待的CAP咨询前后经历了安置变化。在调整了地点因素后,CAP判定为虐待可能性高的儿童发生安置变化的可能性比判定为虐待可能性低的儿童高28.7%(25.7 - 31.8%),黑人/原住民儿童发生安置变化的可能性比其他种族儿童高6.7%(3.1 - 10.4%)(p < 0.001)。在完全调整模型中,这些差异虽有所减弱但仍然存在。CAP判定与儿童种族之间没有显著关联。
CAP对身体虐待可能性的评估与儿童安置变化的概率密切相关。黑人或原住民种族虽与CAP对虐待可能性的评估无关,但即使在调整了儿童、病例和社会风险因素后,其安置变化的可能性仍会增加。