Core Dataset Project: Child Welfare Service Histories

By Robert Goerge, John Van Voorhis, Lisa Sanfilippo, and Allen Harden

Chapin Hall Center for Children at the University of Chicago

April 8, 1996

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The focus of this study is on the key events that individual children may experience in the public child welfare service system. This report discusses the importance of this type of research, the issues that can be addressed with the information produced, an initial set of analyses addressing key questions in child welfare and an agenda for future work.

The child welfare system is split into two domains: 1) child protection, which receives and investigates reports of abuse and neglect and 2) child welfare services, which provides out-of- home care, casework and other in-home or community based services. In this report, our goal is to create indicators across the two domains by linking data from the information systems of the two domains. We also hope to find comparability among children's history patterns in both Illinois and Michigan.

The size of the population in this report is nearly 1.4 million children in Illinois and 800,000 in Michigan. Using methods to unduplicate counting across the system, these numbers are children and not events in the system. The major difference in this work compared to most other work done at the population-level, is that our unit of analysis is the child across years and not a child or a child-event within a particular year.

Main Findings

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