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Does mandatory reporting of child abuse and neglect work? Dr. Frank Ainsworth Edith Cowan University Perth
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Question What evidence is there that children are abused less in jurisdictions where mandatory reporting exists by comparison to jurisdictions where it does not exist?
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How will this question be addressed? It will be examined by comparing statistical data from NSW that has mandatory reporting and Western Australia that does not have mandatory reporting.
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Table 1. Comparison of notifications of child abuse and neglect by type of action for New South Wales (mandatory reporting) and Western Australia (non-mandatory reporting) 2000-2001. ____________________________________________________________ Type of actionNew South Wales Western Australia ____________________________________________________________ Total notifications 40,937 (100 %) 2,851 (100 %) Total investigations 25,292 (61.8 %) 2,759 (96.8 %) Finalised 19,913 (48.6 %) 2,392 (83.9 %) investigations Investigations 5,379 (13.1 %) 367 (12.9 %) not finalised Substantiated 7.501 (18.3 %) 1,191 (41.8 %) investigations Unsubstantiated 7,812 (19.1 %) 1,201 (42.1 %) notifications Not investigated 1 15,645 (38.2 %) 92 (3.2 %) ____________________________________________________________ Source: Australian Institute for Health and Welfare, Canberra, Child Protection Australia 2000-2001.
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Recalculating the rates AIWH in calculating the substantiation rates remove ‘not finalised’ and ‘not investigated’ cases before making the calculation of substantiation rates and that inflates the these rates. I have not done this as logically ‘not finalised’ and ‘not investigated’ cases are in my view not substantiated cases. NSW also have a category of ‘child at risk’ that means ‘not substantiated’.
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Table 2. Comparison of outcomes for New South Wales (mandatory reporting) and Western Australia (non-mandatory reporting) - recalculations 2000-2001. ____________________________________________________________ Outcome New South WalesWestern Australia ____________________________________________________________ Notifications 40,937 (100 %)2,851 (100 %) Not substantiated 33,987 (83.0 %)1,660 (58.2 %) Substantiated 7.501 (17.0 %)1,191 (41.8 %) Ratio in favour of 8.3 - 1 5.8 - 1 non-substantiation Families receiving 1,875 (25.0 %) 415 (25.0 %) service (estimate) ____________________________________________________________ Source: Australian Institute for Health and Welfare, Canberra, Child Protection Australia 2000-2001.
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Tab le 3. Australia wide (ex. Western Australia) notifications and recalculated substantiations of child abuse and neglect 2000-2001. ____________________________________________________________ Type of actionNotifications Recalculated substantiations ___________________________________________________________ Total notifications 115,471 (100 %) 115, 471 (100 %) Total investigations 66,265 (57.4 %) 66,265 (57.4 %) Finalised 54,286 (47.0 %) 54,286 (47.0 %) investigations Investigations 11,979 (10.4 %)- not finalised Substantiated 27,367 (23.7 %) 23,367 (23.7 %) investigations Unsubstantiated 22,291 (19.3 %) 88,306 (76.5 %) 2 notifications Not investigated 1 47,389 (41.0 %) - Ratio in favour of - 7.6 - 1 non-substantiation ____________________________________________________________ Source: Australian Institute for Health and Welfare, Canberra, Child Protection Australia 2000-2001.
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Other data * Hospitalization for ‘child battering or other maltreatment’. National figure 1997-98 - 0.12/1000 children * Child deaths – homicide 1989-93 – 32 deaths per year NSW 1999, Child Death Review Team, 14 deaths (2 due to inadequate child protection)
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Cost - Productivity Commission 1999-2000 figures NSW, $65.86 per child 0-16 years WA, $21.22 per child 0-16 years
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Summary NSWWA Ratio in favour of non-substantiation 8.3 - 15.8 - 1 Cost $65.86 per child$21.22 per child Question Does this evidence make you change your mind about mandatory reporting?
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