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Article
Family Outcomes in Alternative Response: A Multilevel Analysis of Recurrence.
Children and Youth Services Review
  • Mathew C. Uretsky, Portland State University
  • Terry V. Shaw, University of Maryland
Document Type
Citation
Publication Date
11-9-2021
Disciplines
Abstract

Alternative response (AR) is preventative, family-centered, strengths-based approach within child protective services (CPS). When AR is offered it typically creates a two-track system where low- to moderate-risk families are not subjected to a traditional, fact-finding response that concludes with a determination of child abuse/neglect. One area that continues to concern child welfare administrators and researchers is recurrence, or when a family returns to CPS. Yet, it is unclear whether AR families have the same or different predictors of recurrence than TR families. Using a multilevel analytic approach, the present study followed 17,741 families in one mid-Atlantic state for 18-months post-response to determine what child, family, and county-level predicted a reported re-investigation and a substantiated re-investigation. We found few differences in predictors at the child and family level but found distinct differences at the county level for AR families. Recommendations are provided for policy, practice, and research, including a suggestion for further inquiry on what makes an optimal AR track.

Rights

© 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

DOI
10.1016/j.childyouth.2021.106283
Persistent Identifier
https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/37160
Citation Information
Shipe, S. L., Uretsky, M. C., & Shaw, T. V. (2022). Family outcomes in alternative response: A multilevel analysis of recurrence. Children and Youth Services Review, 132, 106283.