新冠肺炎对儿童福利相关家庭的影响:对父母-儿童团聚和儿童福利专业人员的影响

Q2 Social Sciences Developmental Child Welfare Pub Date : 2021-09-01 DOI:10.1177/25161032211045257
A. Goldberg, D. Brodzinsky, J. Singer, Patience Crozier
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引用次数: 12

摘要

新冠肺炎大流行影响了参与儿童福利系统的儿童和父母以及与这些家庭合作的专业人员。这项混合方法研究利用2020年8月至9月收集的调查数据,调查了美国196名儿童福利相关专业人员(77名律师、99名个案工作者和20名治疗师)对新冠肺炎对原籍父母、儿童、养父母和儿童福利专业人员的影响的看法。特别关注新冠肺炎的影响以及对父母-子女接触和团聚的相关挑战。关于职业压力,超过一半的参与者担心自己在新冠肺炎期间的人身安全和健康,超过四分之三的人表示担心与儿童福利有关的家庭的安全和福祉。与会者,尤其是律师,对父母与孩子的接触和对团聚的干扰表示担忧。在疫情早期,父母与孩子的面对面探访几乎停止了,参与者发现了有效虚拟探访的障碍,包括缺乏养父母监督、技术问题、儿童的发展阶段和/或缺乏参与。律师们特别批评停止亲自探访,并认为这是对儿童与父母关系和团聚的严重威胁。与会者,特别是儿童福利工作者,对疫情期间儿童的心理健康和教育结果表示担忧。调查结果对律师、儿童福利工作者和其他直接和间接与儿童福利相关家庭接触的从业者有影响。
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The impact of COVID-19 on child welfare-involved families: Implications for parent–child reunification and child welfare professionals
The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted children and parents involved in the child welfare system and the professionals working with these families. Using survey data collected August–September of 2020, this mixed-methods study examined the perspectives of 196 child welfare-involved professionals (77 attorneys, 99 caseworkers, and 20 therapists) in the United States about the impact of COVID-19 on parents of origin, children, foster parents, and child welfare professionals. Particular attention was paid to the implications of COVID-19 and associated challenges for parent–child contact and reunification. With respect to professional stresses, more than half of participants worried about their own personal safety and health amidst COVID-19, and more than three-quarters expressed concerns about the safety and well-being of child welfare-involved families. Participants, especially attorneys, expressed concerns about parent–child contact and disruptions to reunification. In-person parent–child visits had all but ceased during the early part of the pandemic, and participants identified barriers to effective virtual visits, including lack of foster parent oversight, technology issues, and children’s developmental stage and/or lack of engagement. Attorneys were especially critical of the cessation of in-person visits and viewed this as a serious threat to child-parent bonds and reunification. Participants, especially child welfare workers, voiced concerns about children’s mental health and educational outcomes amidst the pandemic. Findings have implications for attorneys, child welfare workers, and other practitioners who directly and indirectly interface with child welfare-involved families.
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来源期刊
Developmental Child Welfare
Developmental Child Welfare Medicine-Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
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