Literature DB >> 30083416

Improving Child Welfare Outcomes: Balancing Investments in Prevention and Treatment.

Jeanne S Ringel, Dana Schultz, Joshua Mendelsohn, Stephanie Brooks Holliday, Katharine Sieck, Ifeanyi Edochie, Lauren Davis.   

Abstract

To provide objective analyses about the effects of prevention and treatment programs on child welfare outcomes, RAND researchers built a quantitative model that simulated how children enter and flow through the nation's child welfare system. They then used the model to project how different policy options (preventive services, family preservation treatment efforts, kinship care treatment efforts, and a policy package that combined preventive services and kinship care) would affect a child's pathway through the system, costs, and outcomes in early adulthood. This study is the first attempt to integrate maltreatment risk, detection, pathways through the system, and consequences in a comprehensive quantitative model that can be used to simulate the impact of policy changes. This research suggests that expanding both prevention and treatment is needed to achieve the desired policy objectives: Combining options that intervene at different points in the system and increasing both prevention and treatment generates stronger effects than would any single option. The simulation model identifies ways to increase both targeted prevention and treatment while achieving multiple objectives: reducing maltreatment and the number of children entering the system, improving a child's experience moving through the system, and improving outcomes in young adulthood. These objectives can all be met while also reducing total child welfare system costs. A policy package combining expanded prevention and kinship supports pays for itself: There is a net cost reduction in the range of 3 to 7 percent of total spending (or approximately $5.2 billion to $10.5 billion saved against the current baseline of $155.9 billion) for a cohort of children born over a five-year period.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Child Abuse and Neglect; Foster Care; Modeling and Simulation; United States

Year:  2018        PMID: 30083416      PMCID: PMC6075810     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rand Health Q        ISSN: 2162-8254


  6 in total

1.  The economic burden of child maltreatment in the United States and implications for prevention.

Authors:  Xiangming Fang; Derek S Brown; Curtis S Florence; James A Mercy
Journal:  Child Abuse Negl       Date:  2012-02-01

2.  You're all grown up now: Termination of foster care support at age 18.

Authors:  Rosemary J Avery; Madelyn Freundlich
Journal:  J Adolesc       Date:  2008-08-13

3.  Health outcomes in young adults from foster care and economically diverse backgrounds.

Authors:  Kym R Ahrens; Michelle M Garrison; Mark E Courtney
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  2014-11-03       Impact factor: 7.124

4.  The nurse-family partnership: An evidence-based preventive intervention.

Authors:  David L Olds
Journal:  Infant Ment Health J       Date:  2006-01

5.  It's not as simple as it sounds: Problems and solutions in accessing and using administrative child welfare data for evaluating the impact of early childhood interventions.

Authors:  Beth L Green; Catherine Ayoub; Jessica Dym Bartlett; Carrie Furrer; Adam Von Ende; Rachel Chazan-Cohen; Joanne Klevens; Peggy Nygren
Journal:  Child Youth Serv Rev       Date:  2015-10

6.  Effects of enhanced foster care on the long-term physical and mental health of foster care alumni.

Authors:  Ronald C Kessler; Peter J Pecora; Jason Williams; Eva Hiripi; Kirk O'Brien; Diana English; James White; Richard Zerbe; A Chris Downs; Robert Plotnick; Irving Hwang; Nancy A Sampson
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  2008-06
  6 in total
  1 in total

1.  Promoting Children's Mental, Emotional, and Behavioral (MEB) Health in All Public Systems, Post-COVID-19.

Authors:  Kimberly Eaton Hoagwood; William Gardner; Kelly J Kelleher
Journal:  Adm Policy Ment Health       Date:  2021-03-22
  1 in total

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