1 / 45

Using Longitudinal Data to Further Understand the Foster Care Experience

Using Longitudinal Data to Further Understand the Foster Care Experience. Joe Magruder, Ph.D. Center for Social Services Research School of Social Welfare University of California at Berkeley Child Welfare League of America Washington February 28, 2012

patricia
Download Presentation

Using Longitudinal Data to Further Understand the Foster Care Experience

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Using Longitudinal Data to Further Understand the Foster Care Experience Joe Magruder, Ph.D. Center for Social Services Research School of Social Welfare University of California at Berkeley Child Welfare League of America Washington February 28, 2012 The California Child Welfare Performance Indicators Project is supported by the California Department of Social Services and the Stuart Foundation

  2. Overview • What we know now: First Placement Episode Outputs with only publicly available child-based data • Linked data: Adding to what we know • Linked parent and sibling data • Linked birth record data • Linked placement episode data • Summary

  3. Reunification Adoption Reunification Reunification Reunification Guardianship 4 Years Birth 1 Year 2 Years 3 Years Some Typical Longitudinal First Episode Trajectories of Children Entering Care as Newborns

  4. http://cssr.berkeley.edu/ucb_childwelfare

  5. N=14,283

  6. N=2,707

  7. N=1,385

  8. N=1,322

  9. First Episode Summary • We know a lot about the outputs of first placement episodes • In the case of infants: • Reunification rates have at least been constant • Adoption rates have increased • Still in care rates have fallen • Changes have occurred across ethnicity, although Blacks lag in reunification and adoption

  10. But we also know: • Children reenter care. Thus: When the child’s entire foster care experience is considered, what is the child’s status at, e.g., 10 years of age? • Children exist in the context of families. Thus: What child and family characteristics are associated with the child’s status?

  11. Reunification Adoption Reunification Reunification Reunification Guardianship 4 Years Birth 1 Year 2 Years 3 Years Some Typical Longitudinal First Episode Trajectories of Children Entering Care as Newborns

  12. Some Typical Longitudinal Trajectories of Children Entering Care as Newborns

  13. Data linking To seek answers to these questions, three forms of data linking are considered: • Longitudinal linking between placement episodes, including with post adoption placements. • Horizontal linking between children and their parents and siblings. • External linking to birth certificate data.

  14. The data are from California Children’s Services Archive at the Center for Social Services Research. The archive is a longitudinal data base based on the California Child Welfare Services Case Management System (CWS/CMS). Prior to analysis, the data were extensively cleaned and linked (e.g., to parents and siblings) Data

  15. Study Population • 5,875 children born in 1999 • First entered California foster care before age 1 • Followed until tenth birthday • Child characteristics: • 52.4% entered as neonates • 48.8% female • 39.8% Hispanic, 27.2% Black, 28.8% White • 86.6% removed due to neglect

  16. Data Cleaning • Episode level • Consecutive episodes merged if 0 or 1 day gap • Starting/ending dates conformed to placement dates • Trial home visits of > 30 days ended episode • Placement level • Placement overlap eliminated • Placement before birth is impossible • Consecutive placements with the same caregiver merged if 0 or 1 day gap

  17. Data Linking • Longitudinal • All placement episodes for cohort children were identified • Matching used to identify adoption reentries • Horizontal • Parents identified • Other children of mothers (maternal siblings) identified • External • Probabilistic matching with birth certificate data

  18. The Children’s Mothers • Median age: 27 (neonates 29, other 24) • 40.6% had had other children in care (neonates 53.3%, other 26.8%) • 10.7% had had other children adopted (neonates 16.2%, other 4.8%) • 10% incarcerated while child in care (neonates 11.1%, other 8.7%)

  19. The Children’s Fathers 88.8% identified in child welfare record (neonates 87.9%, other 89.8% Of those who were identified: • 13.4% age not reported (neonates 16.7%, other 9.8%) • Median age: 30 (neonates 33, other 28) • 13.8% incarcerated while child in care (neonates 12.5%, other 15.2%)

  20. Birth Certificate Data Of the 91.4% with a Birth Certificate match: • 48.3% Father named on birth certificate • 61.8% Descriptive data on father • 75.7% Medi-Cal funded delivery • 17.5% Abnormality identified • Maternal education: • 49.6% Less than high school • 37.3% High school • 11.3% Some college • 1.8% College graduate

  21. Effect of Adding Parent/Sibling Data • Reunification after first placement episode • Reentry after first placement episode

  22. First Episode Reunification – Including Some Birth Certificate Data

  23. Reentry Following Reunification – Including Some Birth Certificate Data

  24. Effect of Adding All Placement Episodes (Longitudinal Data) • Case Flow • Comparison over time between First Episode Outputs and Actual Status • Status at age 10

  25. Case Flow

  26. Age 10 Reunification Status – Including Some Birth Certificate Data

  27. Summary • The traditional first episode analysis overstates reunification and understates adoption. • Long-term foster care is increasingly rare. • Having had older siblings in care and age at entry are predictors of outcome. • Fathers matter.

  28. Thank you to our colleagues at the Center for Social Services Research, the California Department of Social Services, and the Stuart Foundation cssr.berkeley.edu/ucb_childwelfarejoemagruder@berkeley.edu

More Related