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Health service use of infants involved in family justice care and supervision proceedings in Wales: a data linkage study

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Health service use of infants involved in family justice care and supervision proceedings in Wales: a data linkage study. / Farr, Ian; Cowley, Laura; Broadhurst, Karen et al.
In: International Journal of Population Data Science, Vol. 9, No. 1, 15.04.2024.

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Farr I, Cowley L, Broadhurst K, Odd D, Jones C, Bailey G et al. Health service use of infants involved in family justice care and supervision proceedings in Wales: a data linkage study. International Journal of Population Data Science. 2024 Apr 15;9(1). doi: 10.23889/ijpds.v9i1.2362

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Farr, Ian ; Cowley, Laura ; Broadhurst, Karen et al. / Health service use of infants involved in family justice care and supervision proceedings in Wales: a data linkage study. In: International Journal of Population Data Science. 2024 ; Vol. 9, No. 1.

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@article{c379987cd2ea4895abaf6808f991e67a,
title = "Health service use of infants involved in family justice care and supervision proceedings in Wales: a data linkage study",
abstract = "IntroductionWhen a child has suffered, or is at risk of suffering, significant harm from parents or caregivers, the local authority may issue Section 31 (s.31) Care and Supervision proceedings under the Children Act (1989).ObjectivesWe compared the healthcare use of infants less than one year old subject to s.31 proceedings in Wales (n = 1,332),to that of a comparison group of infants not subject to s.31 proceedings (n = 204,417), between January 2011 and February 2020.MethodsPopulation-based e-cohort study utilising data held in the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) Databank. Infants in s.31 proceedings were identified using the Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service dataset. This was linked to demographic and healthcare datasets, to identify General Practice (GP) visits, emergency department (ED) attendances, and hospital admissions (emergency and elective); before the study end date or the child's first birthday for the comparison group, orbefore the s.31 application date.Regression analysis calculated event rate ratios [RR] and incidence rate ratios [IRR] for healthcare events, adjusting for widerdeterminants of health (e.g. perinatal factors, maternal mental health, deprivation), and investigated reasons for healthcare use.ResultsInfants in s.31 proceedings had ahigher number and incidence of healthcare events compared with the comparison group, across all healthcare settings. Differences were greatest for emergency hospital admissions (IRR = 4.03, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.53 - 4.59; RR = 4.60, CI = 3.90 - 5.41). {"}Injury and poisoning{"} was the main reason for emergency admissions amongst infants in s.31 proceedings. For ED presentations, emergency hospital admissions, and GP visits, there were proportionally more events for these infants across all top ten reasons for healthcare.ConclusionsFindings highlight greater healthcare utilisation for infants involved in s.31 proceedings in Wales, helping to build a better understanding of their needs and vulnerabilities.",
author = "Ian Farr and Laura Cowley and Karen Broadhurst and David Odd and Carys Jones and Grace Bailey and Bachar Alrouh and Mariam Abouelenin and Linda Cusworth and Stefanie Doebler and David Ford and Lucy Griffiths",
year = "2024",
month = apr,
day = "15",
doi = "10.23889/ijpds.v9i1.2362",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "International Journal of Population Data Science",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Health service use of infants involved in family justice care and supervision proceedings in Wales: a data linkage study

AU - Farr, Ian

AU - Cowley, Laura

AU - Broadhurst, Karen

AU - Odd, David

AU - Jones, Carys

AU - Bailey, Grace

AU - Alrouh, Bachar

AU - Abouelenin, Mariam

AU - Cusworth, Linda

AU - Doebler, Stefanie

AU - Ford, David

AU - Griffiths, Lucy

PY - 2024/4/15

Y1 - 2024/4/15

N2 - IntroductionWhen a child has suffered, or is at risk of suffering, significant harm from parents or caregivers, the local authority may issue Section 31 (s.31) Care and Supervision proceedings under the Children Act (1989).ObjectivesWe compared the healthcare use of infants less than one year old subject to s.31 proceedings in Wales (n = 1,332),to that of a comparison group of infants not subject to s.31 proceedings (n = 204,417), between January 2011 and February 2020.MethodsPopulation-based e-cohort study utilising data held in the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) Databank. Infants in s.31 proceedings were identified using the Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service dataset. This was linked to demographic and healthcare datasets, to identify General Practice (GP) visits, emergency department (ED) attendances, and hospital admissions (emergency and elective); before the study end date or the child's first birthday for the comparison group, orbefore the s.31 application date.Regression analysis calculated event rate ratios [RR] and incidence rate ratios [IRR] for healthcare events, adjusting for widerdeterminants of health (e.g. perinatal factors, maternal mental health, deprivation), and investigated reasons for healthcare use.ResultsInfants in s.31 proceedings had ahigher number and incidence of healthcare events compared with the comparison group, across all healthcare settings. Differences were greatest for emergency hospital admissions (IRR = 4.03, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.53 - 4.59; RR = 4.60, CI = 3.90 - 5.41). "Injury and poisoning" was the main reason for emergency admissions amongst infants in s.31 proceedings. For ED presentations, emergency hospital admissions, and GP visits, there were proportionally more events for these infants across all top ten reasons for healthcare.ConclusionsFindings highlight greater healthcare utilisation for infants involved in s.31 proceedings in Wales, helping to build a better understanding of their needs and vulnerabilities.

AB - IntroductionWhen a child has suffered, or is at risk of suffering, significant harm from parents or caregivers, the local authority may issue Section 31 (s.31) Care and Supervision proceedings under the Children Act (1989).ObjectivesWe compared the healthcare use of infants less than one year old subject to s.31 proceedings in Wales (n = 1,332),to that of a comparison group of infants not subject to s.31 proceedings (n = 204,417), between January 2011 and February 2020.MethodsPopulation-based e-cohort study utilising data held in the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) Databank. Infants in s.31 proceedings were identified using the Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service dataset. This was linked to demographic and healthcare datasets, to identify General Practice (GP) visits, emergency department (ED) attendances, and hospital admissions (emergency and elective); before the study end date or the child's first birthday for the comparison group, orbefore the s.31 application date.Regression analysis calculated event rate ratios [RR] and incidence rate ratios [IRR] for healthcare events, adjusting for widerdeterminants of health (e.g. perinatal factors, maternal mental health, deprivation), and investigated reasons for healthcare use.ResultsInfants in s.31 proceedings had ahigher number and incidence of healthcare events compared with the comparison group, across all healthcare settings. Differences were greatest for emergency hospital admissions (IRR = 4.03, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.53 - 4.59; RR = 4.60, CI = 3.90 - 5.41). "Injury and poisoning" was the main reason for emergency admissions amongst infants in s.31 proceedings. For ED presentations, emergency hospital admissions, and GP visits, there were proportionally more events for these infants across all top ten reasons for healthcare.ConclusionsFindings highlight greater healthcare utilisation for infants involved in s.31 proceedings in Wales, helping to build a better understanding of their needs and vulnerabilities.

U2 - 10.23889/ijpds.v9i1.2362

DO - 10.23889/ijpds.v9i1.2362

M3 - Journal article

VL - 9

JO - International Journal of Population Data Science

JF - International Journal of Population Data Science

IS - 1

ER -