| |
IntroductionThe Child Welfare Partnership (CWP) at Portland State University provides educational, training, and research assistance to SOSCF. The research component of the CWP conducts research to recognize the changing client population, provide statistical models for deploying and redeploying staff, and optimizing the use of limited resources. These studies enable SOSCF administration to make informed decisions about serving this needy population of Oregonians. This report profiles the client population served by SOSCF branch offices. The “Cohort Studies” profile a group of children entering substitute care during a period of time. This report profiles children entering long-term foster care from mid-1992 to 1995; the profiles include parental problems or conditions, child problems, child’s age, severity of maltreatment, barriers affecting family reunification, and services offered to families. The long-term population profiled in this report are children who are in care for at least 14 days during the year after their removal. About 80% of the children entering foster care in Oregon are considered long-term cases; the remaining 20% are quickly returned home and do not remain in foster care for an extended period. MethodsReason for Removal
Child's Age GroupsIn Oregon, children ages 0-4 years represent 29% of the child population, children ages 5-9 years represent 28% of the child population, children 10-14 years represent 28% of the child population, and children 15-17 years represent 16% of the child population. For the population of children entering foster care, nearly half are 0-5 years, 29% are ages 6-12 years, and 23% are ages 13-17 years. A disproportionate number of preschool children are in long-term foster care. Reuniting families with young children is a difficult decision -- the youngest children are the most vulnerable to serious maltreatment, however, parent-child bonding is most important when children are young. The age of the child victim is one of the most important variables in child welfare. The age of children entering care is continually decreasing as limited resources prohibit serving all needy children and families. SOSCF is forced to prioritize families with the greatest need or most likely to severely maltreat their child. This trend is expected to continue as the demand for child welfare services continues to outstrip the agency’s ability to serve maltreating families.
Level of VulnerabilityLevel 1 cases involve the most severe types of child maltreatment. Child maltreatment related fatalities, fractured skulls, brain damaged children resulting from shaken baby syndrome, severely drug affected infants, abandoned children, and severely sexually abused children are all considered level 1. Level 2 cases involve younger children exposed to chronic neglect, severe emotional abuse, moderate physical abuse, and children left with babysitters whose parents do not return. Level 3 cases often involve treatment for children or treatment for parents. Children with severe emotional disturbances, physical/medical handicaps, mental problems, and child sexual offenders requiring treatment are all considered level 3. In addition, parental incarceration, parental hospitalization, and parental detoxification treatment are all categorized as level 3. Level 4 cases are milder forms of child maltreatment to young children (ages 0-5 years) and more severe forms of child maltreatment to older children (ages 13-17 years). Level 5 and level 6 cases include mild and moderate maltreatment to older children. Level 7 cases have traditionally been recognized as out of control teenagers. In addition to the chronic acting out teenagers, level 7 cases involve mild physical abuse, mild neglect, juvenile delinquents, and voluntary requests for placement. Fewer and fewer level 7 children are being served by SOSCF; other community agencies are provided resources to serve this population of children and parents.
Child ProblemsMost of the older children entering foster care exhibit problems. Although younger children tend to exhibit fewer problems, many younger children later develop behaviors or problems related to the maltreatment. Thus, although 85% of the children entering foster care do exhibit problems, some not identified with problems will later exhibit problems. These estimates are considered conservative and reflect the proportion of children entering foster care who exhibit problems in the year after the removal. Problems exhibited by children entering foster care are important to profile. More problematic children require more extensive treatment and require more skilled providers. Foster parents will need more training and skills, residential treatment facilities will require more intensive services for more extended periods, and matching of children to prospective adoptive families will require more efforts to minimize disruption rates.
Family FactorsSome family factors increase the likelihood a child will be placed in foster care; other family factors increase the likelihood a child will be seriously maltreated. Unemployment, drug/alcohol involvement, criminal involvement, and inadequate housing increase the likelihood of a foster care placement. These family factors are much more common with the population of children in foster care than the population being served in-home. There are other parental characteristics associated with the risk of serious maltreatment. Mothers with young infants who are mentally ill are more susceptible to seriously maltreating their child. Father figures who are criminally involved and prone to violent acts are more likely to seriously maltreat a child. The factors below include the more important factors associated with risk of a child entering foster care and /or risk of serious maltreatment. When these factors are common in a community, the number of children entering care and the number of serious maltreatment cases are expected to be higher than other communities.
Parental BarriersAll barriers influencing a child’s return home have been identified for each family. When a single barrier is selected for children not returning home, the most important barriers preventing family reunification can be identified. Parental drug involvement (27%), a parent unwilling to be a parental resource (10%), a parent who cannot be located (7%), mental condition (7%), chronic neglect (6%), and alcohol abuse (6%) are the most important parental barriers that prevent a child from returning home. Communities where these barriers are common will have more difficulty returning children home.
Parental ServicesThere are 38 different services provided to maltreating parents that are recognized by the Cohort Study. The fifteen most common services constitute 80% of the services provided. The average family is provided with four services to the parent(s). About 50% of those services are completed by either parent, about 25% are partially competed, and about 25% are not attended. Most of the common services listed below are associated with promoting family reunification or minimizing re-abuse. Visitation, parent training, drug/alcohol treatment, counseling, and alcoholics/narcotics anonymous are all associated with higher return home rates. Low return home rates are associated with parents who do not participate with services. Although many services are associated with increased numbers of children returning home, fewer services are associated with lower re-abuse rates. Parent training, drug/alcohol inpatient treatment, individual counseling, and alcoholic/narcotics anonymous are all associated with lower re-abuse rates. Most services require full parental participation to decrease re-abuse rate. A full report on service effectiveness can be obtained from the Child Welfare Partnership (503-315-4268).
Child ServicesChildren ages 0-5 years average one services in the year after their removal, children ages 6-12 years average 1.9 services, and children ages 13-17 years average 2.2 services. The most common services provided in all age groups is individual counseling. Individual counseling to very young children might be substantially different from individual counseling provided to a teenager. About half the children ages 6-12 years are provided individual counseling, about one in five receives a psychological examination, and about 1 in 6 receive an individualized education plan (IEP). These three services represent about half the services provided to children ages 6-12 years. Children ages 13-17 years are the smallest population of children entering foster care yet each child tends to receive more services. Individual counseling is provided to half the children ages 13-17 years, one-quarter are provided psychological examinations and residential treatment, about 16% receive independent living, and about one in nine receive drug/alcohol treatment, an individualized education plan, sexual abuse treatment, and drug/alcohol evaluations.
Jackson SummaryThe most common reasons children enter foster care in Oregon are neglect (25%), parental absence (17%), threat of harm (13%), physical abuse (11%), and treatment issues of the child (11%). Statewide these five reasons account for 77% of the removals; in Jackson County these same five reasons account for 69% of the children entering foster care. Reasons children enter foster care in Jackson County are somewhat similar to the reasons children enter care throughout Oregon. Threat of harm, however, is less prevalent in Jackson County (4%) than statewide (13%). Parental treatment is more common in Jackson County (16%) than elsewhere in Oregon (8%). Parental absence includes situations where the caretaker is incarcerated and where the caretaker leaves a child with a babysitter well beyond the prescribed time. Threat of harm includes situations where a child is at risk for abuse or neglect (e.g. perpetrator residing in the home) although child maltreatment has not occurred. Children entering foster care are categorized into three groups--children age 0-5 years, children ages 6-12 years, and children 13-17 years. Of the children entering foster care in Oregon 48% are ages 0-5 years, 29% are ages 6-12 years, and 23% are ages 13-17 years. The age groups served in Jackson County are similar to the state profile. In Jackson County over half the children entering foster care (51%) are of preschool age. The level of vulnerability is a child welfare profiling system that considers the severity of abuse and the age of the child. Younger and more severely maltreated children are identified as the most vulnerable (levels 1-3) and older, less severely abused children are considered less vulnerable (levels 4-7). Statewide almost 82% of children entering long term foster care are identified as levels 1-3 whereas 92% are identified as levels 1-3 in Jackson County. Level 2 cases are slightly more prevalent in Jackson County (37%) when compared to the 31% statewide. The estimates for levels 3-6 are similar in Jackson County and Oregon. About 8% of the children entering care in Oregon are identified as level 7; this estimate is only 3% in Jackson County. Within each level of vulnerability there are numerous sub levels which accurately describe why children enter foster care. Although the limited number of observations prohibits definitive comparisons between the county and statewide profiles, there are some differences worth noting. For level l cases, severe sexual abuse is more common in Jackson County (9%) than elsewhere in Oregon (6%). Within level 2, estimates of children entering foster care due to chronic neglect are similar for Jackson County and the state (16%). Desertion and parental mental disability affect nearly 10% of the children entering foster care in Jackson County these are about 5% statewide. In level 3 parental incarceration is common with 9% of the statewide population; this estimate is similar for Jackson County. In addition, the estimate for chronic neglect to school aged children is about 6% in Jackson County and statewide. Residential treatment (4%), parental hospitalization/detox (5%) and moderate physical abuse (6%) are more common in Jackson County than elsewhere in Oregon. The effects of abuse, neglect and family separation often result in problems for children entering foster care. Some children are identified with no problems while others have one or more mental, physical or behavioral problems. Children entering foster care in Jackson County are more likely to be identified with no problems (19%) than children entering in other branch offices in Oregon (15%). Victim of sexual abuse (27%), angry/aggressive behavior (27%), and out of control/acting out (26%) are the most common child problems identified in Oregon. These same child problems are slightly less common in Jackson County. Exposure to domestic violence, victim of sequential physical abuse, and academic delay are other child problems more common with the statewide population than in Jackson County. However, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is more common in Jackson County (18%) than elsewhere in Oregon (11%). Parents who maltreat their children often have problems or conditions that affect their parenting. These problems and conditions are known as family factors. The most common family factor identified for families served by SOSCF in Jackson County and Oregon is poor parenting. This factor was present in 72% of families statewide and 73% in Jackson County. Chronic neglect is the second most pervasive factor statewide (57%) and is more common in Jackson County (67%). Single parenthood and drug abuse were found in over 50% of the cases both in Jackson County and statewide. Fifty-five percent of the parents served by SCF in Jackson County abuse alcohol, and 43% of the parents statewide abuse alcohol. Overwhelming childcare (40%) and parent abused as a child (44%) are family factors more common with the parents served in Jackson County; each of these estimates are more than 10 percentage points higher than the statewide estimate. Conversely, teen at first birth is a factor more common elsewhere in Oregon (45%) when compared to Jackson County (34%). The remaining family factors: criminal involvement, unemployment, past CPS removal, poverty/inadequate income and domestic violence have similar estimates for children entering care in Jackson County and in Oregon. Barriers are problems or situations that affect the likelihood of a child returning home. Often, barriers are related to the parental problems that caused the placement in foster care. Although the agency recognizes both child and parental barriers, typically the parental barriers determine if a child returns home. The most common barriers for caretakers statewide are drug involvement (36%), chronic neglect (19%), and alcohol abuse (16%). The same barriers are the most common and more prevalent than the statewide estimates in Jackson County. In Jackson County drug involvement is 41%, chronic neglect is 27% and alcohol abuse is 21%. Poor parenting involving the lack of supervision is present in 8% of all SOSCF families in Jackson County (16%), this estimate is twice the state estimate. Also in Jackson County, 16% of the parents have a mental condition, this is slightly more than the 10% statewide. Angry/aggressive behavior is common with 12% of the statewide population (7% in Jackson County) and sexual offender is a barrier affecting 12% of the clientele in Jackson County (10% statewide). The most common child barrier in Oregon is out of control behavior (12%); this barrier is only 5% in Jackson County. The second most common child barrier is mental/emotional condition, which is 14% in Jackson County and 11% statewide. Unresolved sexual abuse victimization, and angry/aggressive are both about 7% statewide, both are about 5% in Jackson County. In Jackson County and Oregon almost half the children are identified with no barriers. Services are offered to families to resolve issues that brought the child into care, minimize the potential for reabuse, reduce the effects of maltreatment on the child and increase the chance of family reunification. Services are provided through community agencies and directly by SOSCF. Visitation and parent training are the most common services provided to parents in Oregon and in Jackson County. Drug and alcohol evaluation (39%) and psychological examinations (34%) are the third and fourth most common services in Oregon, these are also the third and fourth most commons services offered to parents in Jackson County. Estimates for the following services: drug/alcohol out patient treatment (slightly more than 1/4), drug/alcohol inpatient treatment (about 1/4), and individual counseling (slightly less than 1/4) are similar for parents with children in foster care in Jackson County and throughout Oregon. Other common services provided to parents in Oregon and Jackson County include alcoholics anonymous/ narcotics anonymous (AA/NA), mental health intervention, family counseling, and family unity (estimates being about 19% or lower). Services to children are intended to minimize the effects of maltreatment and modify behavior. The most commonly offered service to children in foster care is individual counseling (25% in Jackson County and 32% statewide). Other commonly offered services statewide include psychological examinations, individual education plans (IEP's) and residential treatment; these services are less than 10% in Jackson County. Finally, nearly 30% of the children entering foster care in Jackson County and Oregon are offered no services. The Jackson County SOSCF Branch and their community partners serve families at risk, protect vulnerable children, and prevent reabuse. By working to diminish abuse and neglect, the agency endeavors to preserve the emotional and physical well being of children and families and to promote healthier family functioning. Comments/suggestions to: Web Editor
|