Custody of cocaine-exposed newborns: determinants of discharge decisions. (41/45)

OBJECTIVES: Maternal cocaine use is a leading grounds for newborn foster placement. This study was initiated to investigate the factors that predict custody status of infants born to substance-abusing women. METHODS: A retrospective cohort design was used to study the correlates of discharge custody decisions for 99 consecutive infants testing positive for cocaine in a public hospital. RESULTS: The population was 49% Black, 40% Hispanic, and 11% other or unknown. Custody at discharge was to mothers (38%), other family members (25%), or agency foster care (36%). Placement outside the family was greater when mothers had prior child welfare records, in Blacks vs others, with no prenatal care, and when mothers were younger at their first delivery or older at the index birth. Denial of custody to the mother was higher with prior child welfare involvement, in Blacks, and when the mother did not live in her own home. Both models also controlled for parity, child sex, and birthweight. CONCLUSIONS: Earlier involvement with child welfare authorities, race, and other factors predict continued separation of mothers and children at newborn discharge, suggesting the need to reexamine current policies and practices.  (+info)

Drugs, poverty, pregnancy, and foster care in Los Angeles, California, 1989 to 1991. (42/45)

To determine the characteristics and childbearing histories of women whose infants entered foster care in Los Angeles County, we examined the cases of 1,155 drug-using women whose infants were removed from them at birth and 236 non-drug-using women whose infants were also removed at birth by court order (July 1989 through March 1991). All of the women were indigent, and less than half had graduated from high school. The drug-using women frequently had criminal records, and more than a quarter were homeless. Many comparison women had mental health problems, and some (16.7%) were teenagers under court custody. Overall, 80% of all the children born to both groups of women were under court jurisdiction. Data obtained after study infants' births on 926 drug-using women observed for 18 months revealed that 22% had borne another infant who was placed in foster care; half of these infants had a positive drug immunoassay. Of the 185 non-drug-using women with 18-month follow-ups, 7.6% had borne another child who was in foster care. The magnitude of the repeated childbearing recorded among both groups of women in this study shows that preventive programs including family planning, mental health services, and drug prevention or rehabilitation programs have not reached this population.  (+info)

Health insurance and child support. (43/45)

This DataWatch examines the extent of the child support system's increasing efforts to require nonresident parents to provide health insurance for their children. More than half of children who have public insurance only and more than one-fourth of uninsured children live in families that could be affected by the child support system. Nonresident fathers now provide insurance to only 15 percent of children living with their mother. More than one-third of such children have public insurance only. Thus, if the child support system could ensure children's coverage through nonresident fathers, taxpayer spending on public insurance could decrease.  (+info)

Munchausen syndrome by proxy abuse perpetrated by men. (44/45)

Fifteen families are described in which one or more child incurred factitious illness abuse as a result of the father's false story and actions. The degree of direct physical harm, and the chance of death, was high in those families in which the father had Munchausen syndrome or marked somatising disorder. Eleven children died and another six survived repetitive smothering or poisoning. Although the extent of the risk to children living with a parent who has marked somatising disorder is unsure, there must be vigilance on behalf of those children.  (+info)

Procedures, placement, and risks of further abuse after Munchausen syndrome by proxy, non-accidental poisoning, and non-accidental suffocation. (45/45)

OBJECTIVES: To investigate outcome, management, and prevention in Munchausen syndrome by proxy, non-accidental poisoning, and non-accidental suffocation. DESIGN: Ascertainment through British Paediatric Surveillance Unit and questionnaires to responding paediatricians. SETTING: The UK and Republic of Ireland, September 1992 to August 1994. SUBJECTS: Children under 14 years diagnosed with the above. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Placement and child protection measures for victims and siblings; morbidity and reabuse rates for victims; abuse of siblings; prosecution of perpetrators. RESULTS: Outcome data for 119 with median follow up of 24 months (range 12 to 44 months). No previously diagnosed factitious disease was found to have been caused by genuine disease. Forty six children were allowed home without conditions at follow up. Children who had suffered from suffocation, non-accidental poisoning, direct harm, and those under 5 years were less likely to go home. Twenty seven (24%) children still had symptoms or signs as a result of the abuse at follow up; 108/120 were originally on a child protection register and 35/111 at follow up. Twenty nine per cent (34/118) of the perpetrators had been prosecuted and most convicted; 17% of the milder cases of Munchausen syndrome by proxy allowed home were reabused. Evidence in siblings suggests that in 50% of families with a suffocated child and 40% with non-accidental poisoning there would be further abuse, some fatal. CONCLUSIONS: This type of abuse is severe with high mortality, morbidity, family disruption, reabuse, and harm to siblings. A very cautious approach for child protection with reintroduction to home only if circumstances are especially favourable is advised. Paediatric follow up by an expert in child protection should also occur.  (+info)