Report

The Relationship Between Caseworker Assessments of Clients’ Social Networks and Child Welfare Placement Outcomes

In this study, published by the Alliance for Strong Families and Communities, caseworkers provided information regarding a mother’s number and quality of social supports and whether an infant was removed from her care. Analyses indicated that infants were less likely to be removed from the mother’s care when caseworkers viewed maternal social supports as positive. This association was strongest when the caseworker identified only positive supports, with no contacts defined as non-positive. Mothers who were assessed to have no intimate relationship or a low level of commitment were nearly twice as likely to have their children in foster care compared to mothers assessed to be in a mid-to-high level of committed relationship. Results suggest that caseworkers’ distinctions between positive and non-positive social networks influence removal decisions. (author abstract)
Source
Partner Resources
National/International
National
Topics/Subtopics
Supportive Services
Child Welfare
TANF Program Administration
Case Management
Publication Date
2015-01-01