| Literature DB >> 30184076 |
Maria Ramiro-Gonzalez1, Darja Dobermann1, Dmytro Metilka1, Emogene Aldridge1, Yongjie Yon1, Dinesh Sethi1.
Abstract
Background: Child maltreatment is a major public health concern, which worsens inequalities and perpetuates social injustice through its far-reaching impacts on the health and development of children affected. The aim of this article was to provide a content analysis of the national policies presently used to address child maltreatment and provide an overview of prevention practices being employed in countries of the World Health Organization (WHO) European Region. This analysis will aid in identifying, which policy areas still require further work to prevent child maltreatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30184076 PMCID: PMC6345150 DOI: 10.1093/eurpub/cky176
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Public Health ISSN: 1101-1262 Impact factor: 3.367
Framework to conduct content analysis of policies and preventive interventions analysed in secondary policy analysis
| Policy content analysis framework | |
|---|---|
| Variables | Descriptions |
| Quantified objectives | Reduction in cases of child maltreatment by a quantified amount over a defined time period |
| Time frame | Clear time frame defined for implementation of the policy |
| Target population | Clearly defined population groups targeted by the policy such as children and or families either in the general population or those at higher risk |
| Multi-sector involvement | Participation of different stakeholders from different sectors such as health, welfare, justice, education and non-governmental organizations in formation and implementation of the policy |
| Planned interventions | Preventive interventions to be implemented to address specified objectives |
| Lead agency | Specified public administrative body, which is responsible for the development, coordination of implementation and policy outcome evaluation |
| Budget | A budget to finance policy development and implementation is mentioned or implied within the document |
| Monitoring and evaluation | Mechanism in place or in development for monitoring policy implementation process and evaluating its effectiveness in the target population in achieving specified objectives |
| Government minister/ ministry approval | Formal approval by government, or government minister/ministry for policy development |
| Interventions | Descriptions |
| School-based violence prevention | Education programmes, based within schools, teaching children to recognize harmful situations and distinguish between appropriate and inappropriate forms of touch and include multicomponent preschool violence prevention programmes and sexual abuse training programmes such as Kidpower, Stay Safe |
| Public awareness | Programmes to disseminate messages on child maltreatment among the general population using channels such as: television, radio, social media and other internet platforms raising awareness of the issue, changing social norms regarding the acceptance of abusive behaviour, gender equality and encouraging reporting of maltreatment |
| Hospital-based programmes | Programmes in which health-care professionals educate new parents in the dangers of shaking their child and providing alternative strategies for dealing with persistent crying such as the Period of Purple Crying and the Shaken Baby Prevention Project |
| Home-visiting programmes | Programmes which provide intensive, in-home early years support for parents whose children are at risk of poor outcomes such as the Nurse Family Partnership, Early Head-start and Step towards Effective Enjoyable Parenting |
| Parenting programmes | Programmes to strengthen the relationship between parents and children and improve parents’ skills, knowledge and confidence to support child development and behaviour management such as Triple P (Positive Parenting Program), Parents Anonymous, Incredible Years, Adults and Children Together Against Violence and Parenting for Lifelong Health |
| Capacity development | Programmes designed to increase the skills and confidence of health-care staff and other professionals for identifying and preventing child maltreatment such as Safe Environment for Every Kid |
| Community interventions | Programmes to enhance community capacity to prevent child maltreatment by expanding resources and promoting a culture of collective responsibility for positive child development and include support and mutual aid groups for parents, early child care services, care of vulnerable children and improving residential care services |
| Legal action | Specific laws for prohibiting child maltreatment and reducing its risk factors, along with clear courses of action (e.g. fines, penalties, sentences) to be taken when laws are violated and include those against corporal punishment in all settings, intimate partner violence, sexual abuse and exploitation and labour exploitation |
Figure 1Flow-chart identifying the collected documents on national policies about child maltreatment (as of December 2016)
Figure 2Percentage of national policies, which met criteria of the policy framework (table 1)
Figure 3Implementation rate of interventions to prevent child maltreatment (table 1) in 40 WHO European Region Member State countries