Mobilizing agencies for incidence surveys on child maltreatment: successful participation in Switzerland and lessons learned

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Ressource 1Download: Mobilizing agencies for incidence surveys on child maltreatment successful participation in Switzerland and lessons learned. 2018. Jud, Kosirnik, Mitrovic, Ben Salah, Fux, Koehler, Portmann & Knüsel.pdf (876.30 [Ko])
State: Public
Version: Final published version
Serval ID
serval:BIB_14B7C06644DC
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Mobilizing agencies for incidence surveys on child maltreatment: successful participation in Switzerland and lessons learned
Journal
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health
Author(s)
Jud Andreas, Kosirnik Céline, Mitrovic Tanja, Ben Salah Hakim, Fux Etienne
Working group(s)
Koehler Jana, Portmann Rahel, Knüsel René
ISSN
1753-2000
Publication state
Published
Issued date
03/01/2018
Pages
1-8
Language
english
Abstract
Background
Many countries around the world lack data on the epidemiology of agency response to child maltreatment. They therefore lack information on how many children in need get help and protection or if children stand equal chances across regions to get services. However, it has proven difficult to commit child protection agencies to participation in incidence studies.
Methods
The Optimus Study invested in a continuous collaborative effort between research and practice to develop a data collection for the first national study on the incidence of agency responses to all forms of child maltreatment in Switzerland. An innovative approach of utilizing individual agencies’ standardized data reduced work burden for participation respectably: any arbitrary excerpt of data on new cases between September 1 and November 30, 2016, could be uploaded to a secured web-based data integration platform. It was then mapped automatically to fit the study’s definitions and operationalizations.
Results
This strategy has led to a largely successful participation rate of 76% of agencies in the nationwide sample. 253 agencies from the social and health sector, public child protection, and the penal sector have provided data.
Conclusions
Valuing agencies context-specific knowledge and expertise instead of viewing them as mere providers of data is a precondition for representativeness of incidence data on agency responses to child maltreatment. Potential investigators of future similar studies might benefit from the lessons learned of the presented project.

Keywords
Child maltreatment, Incidence, Administrative data, Knowledge mobilization
Open Access
Yes
Create date
02/10/2018 13:40
Last modification date
20/08/2019 13:43
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