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Child welfare inequalities in the four nations of the UK

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Child welfare inequalities in the four nations of the UK. / Bywaters, Paul; Scourfield, Jonathan; Jones, Chantel et al.
In: Journal of Social Work, Vol. 20, No. 2, 31.03.2020.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Bywaters, P, Scourfield, J, Jones, C, Sparks, T, Elliott, M, Hooper, JE, McCartan, C, Shapira, M, Bunting, L & Daniel, B 2020, 'Child welfare inequalities in the four nations of the UK', Journal of Social Work, vol. 20, no. 2. https://doi.org/10.1177/1468017318793479

APA

Bywaters, P., Scourfield, J., Jones, C., Sparks, T., Elliott, M., Hooper, J. E., McCartan, C., Shapira, M., Bunting, L., & Daniel, B. (2020). Child welfare inequalities in the four nations of the UK. Journal of Social Work, 20(2). https://doi.org/10.1177/1468017318793479

Vancouver

Bywaters P, Scourfield J, Jones C, Sparks T, Elliott M, Hooper JE et al. Child welfare inequalities in the four nations of the UK. Journal of Social Work. 2020 Mar 31;20(2). Epub 2018 Sept 11. doi: 10.1177/1468017318793479

Author

Bywaters, Paul ; Scourfield, Jonathan ; Jones, Chantel et al. / Child welfare inequalities in the four nations of the UK. In: Journal of Social Work. 2020 ; Vol. 20, No. 2.

Bibtex

@article{943c14a1d56d4b9b970201d5ba48720a,
title = "Child welfare inequalities in the four nations of the UK",
abstract = "Comparative international data on patterns of inequality in child welfare interventions, for example, the proportion of children about whom there are substantiated child protection concerns or who are in out-of-home care, are far less developed than data about inequalities in health. Few countries collect reliable, comprehensive information and definitions, methods of data collection and analysis are rarely consistent. The four UK countries (England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales) provide a potential {\textquoteleft}natural experiment{\textquoteright} for comparing intervention patterns. This study reports on a large quantitative, descriptive study focusing on children in contact with children{\textquoteright}s services on a single date in 2015. It found that children{\textquoteright}s chances of receiving a child protection intervention were related to family socio-economic circumstances, measured by neighbourhood deprivation, within all four countries. There was a strong social gradient which was significantly steeper in some countries than others. Ethnicity was another important factor underlying inequalities. While inequalities in patterns of intervention between the four countries were considerable, they did not mirror relative levels of deprivation in the child population. Inequalities in intervention rates result from a combination of demand and supply factors. The level and extent of inequity raise profound ethical, economic and practical challenges to those involved in child protection, the wider society and the state.",
author = "Paul Bywaters and Jonathan Scourfield and Chantel Jones and Tim Sparks and Martin Elliott and Hooper, {Jade Elizabeth} and Claire McCartan and Marina Shapira and Lisa Bunting and Brigid Daniel",
year = "2020",
month = mar,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1177/1468017318793479",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
journal = "Journal of Social Work",
issn = "1468-0173",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Child welfare inequalities in the four nations of the UK

AU - Bywaters, Paul

AU - Scourfield, Jonathan

AU - Jones, Chantel

AU - Sparks, Tim

AU - Elliott, Martin

AU - Hooper, Jade Elizabeth

AU - McCartan, Claire

AU - Shapira, Marina

AU - Bunting, Lisa

AU - Daniel, Brigid

PY - 2020/3/31

Y1 - 2020/3/31

N2 - Comparative international data on patterns of inequality in child welfare interventions, for example, the proportion of children about whom there are substantiated child protection concerns or who are in out-of-home care, are far less developed than data about inequalities in health. Few countries collect reliable, comprehensive information and definitions, methods of data collection and analysis are rarely consistent. The four UK countries (England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales) provide a potential ‘natural experiment’ for comparing intervention patterns. This study reports on a large quantitative, descriptive study focusing on children in contact with children’s services on a single date in 2015. It found that children’s chances of receiving a child protection intervention were related to family socio-economic circumstances, measured by neighbourhood deprivation, within all four countries. There was a strong social gradient which was significantly steeper in some countries than others. Ethnicity was another important factor underlying inequalities. While inequalities in patterns of intervention between the four countries were considerable, they did not mirror relative levels of deprivation in the child population. Inequalities in intervention rates result from a combination of demand and supply factors. The level and extent of inequity raise profound ethical, economic and practical challenges to those involved in child protection, the wider society and the state.

AB - Comparative international data on patterns of inequality in child welfare interventions, for example, the proportion of children about whom there are substantiated child protection concerns or who are in out-of-home care, are far less developed than data about inequalities in health. Few countries collect reliable, comprehensive information and definitions, methods of data collection and analysis are rarely consistent. The four UK countries (England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales) provide a potential ‘natural experiment’ for comparing intervention patterns. This study reports on a large quantitative, descriptive study focusing on children in contact with children’s services on a single date in 2015. It found that children’s chances of receiving a child protection intervention were related to family socio-economic circumstances, measured by neighbourhood deprivation, within all four countries. There was a strong social gradient which was significantly steeper in some countries than others. Ethnicity was another important factor underlying inequalities. While inequalities in patterns of intervention between the four countries were considerable, they did not mirror relative levels of deprivation in the child population. Inequalities in intervention rates result from a combination of demand and supply factors. The level and extent of inequity raise profound ethical, economic and practical challenges to those involved in child protection, the wider society and the state.

U2 - 10.1177/1468017318793479

DO - 10.1177/1468017318793479

M3 - Journal article

VL - 20

JO - Journal of Social Work

JF - Journal of Social Work

SN - 1468-0173

IS - 2

ER -