TY - JOUR
T1 - Impact of Safe@Home on Placement and Permanency Outcomes
T2 - Results of a Quasi-Experimental Study
AU - Reyes, Lucia Miranda
AU - Kaye, Sarah
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2022.
PY - 2024/2
Y1 - 2024/2
N2 - This study assessed the effectiveness of Safe@Home, an in-home intervention to (1) prevent out-of-home placement for children at imminent risk of placement, and (2) minimize time in out-of-home care for children already in foster care. Using Coarsened Exact Matching, children who received Safe@Home were matched to a comparison group of children served before Safe@Home was available in their community. All children were determined by the child welfare agency to be unsafe and in need of immediate intervention. The matched samples (Safe@Home n = 510, Comparison n = 851) showed strong baseline equivalence on child age, race/ethnicity, previous history of child welfare involvement, and safety threats. Children who received Safe@Home experienced lower rate of out-of-home placements, higher rate of permanency with a parent (sustained for 12 months after the end of Safe@Home), fewer days in out-of-home care, and shorter time to case closure relative to children who received treatment as usual. There was no effect of Safe@Home on post-permanency outcomes of maltreatment and entry or re-entry after case closure.
AB - This study assessed the effectiveness of Safe@Home, an in-home intervention to (1) prevent out-of-home placement for children at imminent risk of placement, and (2) minimize time in out-of-home care for children already in foster care. Using Coarsened Exact Matching, children who received Safe@Home were matched to a comparison group of children served before Safe@Home was available in their community. All children were determined by the child welfare agency to be unsafe and in need of immediate intervention. The matched samples (Safe@Home n = 510, Comparison n = 851) showed strong baseline equivalence on child age, race/ethnicity, previous history of child welfare involvement, and safety threats. Children who received Safe@Home experienced lower rate of out-of-home placements, higher rate of permanency with a parent (sustained for 12 months after the end of Safe@Home), fewer days in out-of-home care, and shorter time to case closure relative to children who received treatment as usual. There was no effect of Safe@Home on post-permanency outcomes of maltreatment and entry or re-entry after case closure.
KW - family preservation
KW - program evaluation
KW - quasi-experimental designs
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85139529498&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/10775595221132220
DO - 10.1177/10775595221132220
M3 - Article
C2 - 36206539
AN - SCOPUS:85139529498
SN - 1077-5595
VL - 29
SP - 202
EP - 213
JO - Child Maltreatment
JF - Child Maltreatment
IS - 1
ER -