데이터셋 상세
미국
Child Welfare Investigations
This dataset shows the monthly count of new and completed investigations conducted by Child Welfare Services, broken down by type and outcome. The dataset includes statistics for both traditional Investigation Responses and for Alternative Responses. An Alternative Response is intended to increase engagement and service usage through a collaborative partnership with families in cases where there is no Child Protective Services history and the referral suggests low risk of harm to the child. A completed Investigation Response can have one of three outcomes: (1) allegation indicated -- credible evidence found which has not been satisfactorily refuted; (2) allegation ruled out – credible evidence found that the abuse did not occur; and (3) allegation unsubstantiated – insufficient evidence found to support a finding of indicated or ruled out abuse. This dataset is updated quarterly.
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연관 데이터
Children Who Received an Investigation or Alternative Response
공공데이터포털
Counts and rates of children who received an investigation or alternative response from child protective services agencies for the last five federal fiscal years for which data are available. To view more National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System (NCANDS) findings, click link to summary page below: https://healthdata.gov/stories/s/kaeg-w7jc
전북특별자치도 요보호아동 현황
공공데이터포털
전북특별자치도 시군별 요보호아동 발생 현황(발생원인 및 그에 따른 요보호아동 수)우리 기관에서는 더 이상 생성 불가 데이터입니다.
Child Neglect: Cross Sector Service Paths and Outcomes (1993-2001)
공공데이터포털
"Child Neglect: Cross Sector Service Paths & Outcomes" was the first phase of a project that is part of a competitive renewal (scheduled to end in 2008). Using administrative data drawn from education, health, juvenile corrections and social service agencies, this study compared cross sector service paths and outcomes of children in families receiving AFDC and reported to child welfare agencies (1993-1994) compared to a group of children matched by birth year and county of residence in families receiving AFDC, but not reported to child welfare agencies. Children were born 1982 through 1994 and were all under the age of 12 at the study onset. The total number of children in the sample is 10,187. Of the total sample, 5,087 of the children were in the Maltreatment/AFDC group and 5,100 children were in the AFDC Only group. The first phase study AIMS compared maltreated to non-maltreated children according to: (1) Cross-sector service use (sequence, frequency, co-occurrence & duration); (2) The relationship of service patterns to child and adolescent outcomes (e.g. mortality, foster care entry, entry into Special Education, etc.); (3) The association between certain caretaker level outcomes (e.g., permanent exit from AFDC) and child and adolescent outcomes. The AIMS were also examined according to type of maltreatment within the maltreated sample group. Key findings indicate that a report of maltreatment does contribute to the risk of special education entry, death, and entry into juvenile corrections above and beyond poverty. Overall, low-income children who also had maltreatment reports had higher rates of service use and negative outcomes across systems. The children in the maltreated group also entered more service systems on average than the low-income only group. A caretaker's permanent exit from a first spell on AFDC was associated with lower risk of certain negative outcomes like juvenile court petitions. This relationship was stronger for the low-income only group. In general, first reports of neglect, physical abuse or mixed type maltreatment were equally likely to result in later poor outcomes. However, children reported for neglect and mixed type(majority includes neglect) maltreatment were more likely to have recurrent reports of maltreatment and recurrent reports were associated with more negative outcomes. Investigators: Jonson-Reid, M., & Drake, B.
Child Maltreatment Annual Reports
공공데이터포털
,Child Maltreatment Reports contain data from the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System that have been aggregated to the State level,
Program Support for Child Welfare Monitoring Project Fact Sheet
공공데이터포털
The Child Welfare Monitoring Project supports the Children's Bureau, Administration for Children and Families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in administering the Child and Family Services Reviews (CFSRs) and other state child welfare program monitoring activities. Metadata-only record linking to the original dataset. Open original dataset below.