Statutory Threshold Wording is Associated with Child Maltreatment Reporting

The purpose of this study was to determine whether statutory wording of child maltreatment mandated reporting legislation was associated with reporting patterns and substantiation of abuse across U.S. states and territories. Annual state averages for total referrals, referrals screened-out, referrals screened-in, referrals substantiated, and child population (all children in the U.S.; annual average = 74,457,928) were obtained from the 2010-2017 Child Maltreatment Reports. Odds ratios were calculated for: (1) two major statutory language frameworks (suspicion versus belief), (2) seven sub-categories (e.g., suspect, reasonably believe, etc.), and (3) universal mandated reporting (yes versus no). Use of suspicion (versus belief) was associated with higher rates of referrals made (OR = 1.13) and screened-in (OR = 1.13), but lower substantiation rates (OR =.92). States using universal mandated reporting (versus those who did not) had slightly lower rates of referrals (OR =.99), but higher rates of referrals screened-in (OR = 1.16) and substantiated (OR = 1.06). Differences in statutory wording are associated with variability in reports, suggesting the possibility that statutory wording is one factor involved with these differences. However, future research is needed to explore alternative contributing factors and/or explanations.

, Statutory Threshold Wording is Associated with Child Maltreatment Reporting, Child Maltreatment (28, 3) pp. 517-526. Copyright © 2023. DOI: 10.1177/10775595221092961. Users who receive access to an article through a repository are reminded that the article is protected by copyright and reuse is restricted to non-commercial and no derivative uses. Users may also download and save a local copy of an article accessed in an institutional repository for the user's personal reference. For permission to reuse an article, please follow our Process for Requesting Permission.

Files

Metadata

Work Title Statutory Threshold Wording is Associated with Child Maltreatment Reporting
Access
Open Access
Creators
  1. Hannah A. Piersiak
  2. Benjamin H. Levi
  3. Kathryn L. Humphreys
License In Copyright (Rights Reserved)
Work Type Article
Publisher
  1. Child Maltreatment
Publication Date May 19, 2022
Publisher Identifier (DOI)
  1. https://doi.org/10.1177/10775595221092961
Deposited April 25, 2024

Versions

Analytics

Collections

This resource is currently not in any collection.

Work History

Version 1
published

  • Created
  • Added Suspicion_vs_Belief_Accepted_Manuscript_11-17-21.docx
  • Added Creator Hannah A. Piersiak
  • Added Creator Benjamin H. Levi
  • Added Creator Kathryn L. Humphreys
  • Published
  • Updated
  • Updated Publication Date Show Changes
    Publication Date
    • 2023-08-01
    • 2022-05-19