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Recurrence of child maltreatment substantiation [electronic resource] : findings from the administrative data of South Korea’s National Child Protection Agency /

by Yoo, Joan P; Kim, Sewon; Lee, Bong Joo; Lee, Sang-Gyun; Chin, Meejung; Kim, Hyun-Soo; Jang, Hwa Jung.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleDescription: pp. 205-220.Subject(s): Child maltreatment, recurrence of substantiation, risk factors, multilevel discrete time-hazard analysisOnline resources: Click here to access full-text article In: Asia Pacific journal of social work and development 2018, Vol. 28, No.4Summary: The recurrence of child maltreatment substantiation among families served by South Korea’s Child Protection Agency has yet to be thoroughly investigated. This study explores the recurrence of child maltreatment substantiation and related risk factors using the administrative data from the National Child Protection Agency (NCPA) . Multilevel discrete time-hazard analysis is employed. We found that the risk of recurrence is greatest during the first month after initial substantiation. Younger children, those with disabilities, children with a greater number of vulnerabilities, families on welfare, father-headed families and impoverished communities had a heightened risk of recurrence of child maltreatment substantiation. The implications of the findings are discussed.
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The recurrence of child maltreatment substantiation among families served by South Korea’s Child Protection Agency has yet to be thoroughly investigated. This study explores the recurrence of child maltreatment substantiation and related risk factors using the administrative data from the National Child Protection Agency (NCPA) . Multilevel discrete time-hazard analysis is employed. We found that the risk of recurrence is greatest during the first month after initial substantiation. Younger children, those with disabilities, children with a greater number of vulnerabilities, families on welfare, father-headed families and impoverished communities had a heightened risk of recurrence of child maltreatment substantiation. The implications of the findings are discussed.

Mode of access: Internet.


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