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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
January
Maltreated children
more likely to engage in delinquent behavior
Craig
Chamberlain, News Editor
217-333-2894; cdchambe@uiuc.edu
1/13/04
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Children who have experienced maltreatment are significantly more likely
to engage in delinquent behavior, according to a unique new study matching
child welfare and juvenile court records from Chicago and its Cook County
suburbs.
The rate of delinquency increases even more among those removed from
their homes and placed in foster care, say researchers at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, who produced the study. The connection
is most dramatic among boys moved between multiple foster homes.
“This study represents one of the largest and most comprehensive
efforts to understand maltreatment and delinquency,” says Joseph
Ryan, a professor in the Children
and Family Research Center (CFRC), part of the university’s
School of Social Work. Ryan
wrote the study along with Mark Testa, also a professor of social work
at Illinois and the director of the CFRC.
They are presenting their work this week at the annual conference of
the Society for Social Work and Research, being held in New Orleans.
The connections between maltreatment, foster care instability and delinquency
have been suggested in previous research, Ryan said. This is the first
time, however, that researchers have been able to draw on all the records
from both child welfare and juvenile court systems in a given area.
They started with child welfare records on the 18,676 children born
in 1983-84 who were brought into the child welfare system following
substantiated allegations of abuse or neglect in Cook County. The records
were available to researchers as part of a long-term cooperative agreement
between the CFRC and the Illinois Department of Children and Family
Services.
They then matched the child welfare records with delinquency petitions
filed in the Cook County Juvenile Court. The records used from both
systems covered the children from birth to age 18. The researchers also
made use of census and delinquency data from the Illinois Criminal Justice
Information Authority to determine delinquency rates for
non-maltreated children of similar age.
“The
results indicate that substantiated victims of maltreatment average
47 percent higher delinquency rates relative to children not indicated
for abuse or neglect,” Ryan said. “In addition, approximately
16 percent of children placed into substitute care experience at least
one delinquency petition compared to 7 percent of all maltreatment victims
who are not removed from their families.” (About one-third of
children are removed from their homes following substantiated reports
of abuse or neglect, Ryan said.)
Broken down further, the statistics appear to show a different connection
for girls than boys, Ryan said. For girls, it appears that placement
into a foster home, even if stable, is highly correlated with delinquency.
Girls with one placement showed a 6 percent rate of delinquency, versus
3 percent for those who remained in their family homes, and the rate
increased little with multiple placements, he said. The rate of delinquency
for all girls placed into foster homes was 8 percent.
For boys, however, “it seems that it is placement instability,
rather than placement itself, that increases the risk of delinquency
for male victims of maltreatment,” Ryan said. Among males with
one placement in a foster home, the rate of delinquency was 12 percent,
nearly identical to the 11 percent for males who remained in their family
homes. Even among those with two placements, the rate was about the
same, but increased to 16 percent among those with three placements
and 21 percent among those with four or more. Overall, 23 percent of
the boys in substitute care had at least one delinquency petition.
That means almost a quarter of the boys entering placement eventually
end up in juvenile court, “and given the long-term negative outcomes
associated with delinquency, that’s a big deal,” Ryan said.
Seeing that instability in placements dramatically increases the risk
of delinquency is a significant finding in the research, he said. “The
goal from here is to figure out what causes instability and determine
what it is about instability that increases the risk of delinquency.”
In child welfare practice, the study’s results may indicate a
need to continually improve efforts to match children with foster parents,
cutting down on multiple placements, Ryan said. “We certainly
need to figure out the match between what individual youth need and
what the individual foster homes are able to provide. Placement instability
may also disrupt relationships with meaningful individuals and institutions,
and many of these relationships work as protective factors.”
The researchers also have an agreement to analyze records from the Chicago
Public Schools, providing a means for further investigation of the ties
between maltreatment, placement instability, academic achievement, school
mobility, delinquency and other concerns involving children in the child
welfare system.
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