Canadian Research in Brief: 27th Edition (June 2011)
The articles listed below can be accessed through the corresponding journal website or accessed at a local library or university.
Canadian Research in Brief: 27th Edition (June 2011)
McKay, K., & Ross, L.E. (2011). . British Journal of Social
Work, 41(1), 57 – 73.
This exploratory pilot study investigates the current practices and
barriers to the provision of post-placement support services for
adoptive parents in Toronto, Ontario, from the perspective of
adoption workers. Focus groups were conducted with adoption
practitioners at two child welfare agencies in Toronto. Adoption
workers were recruited through electronic flyers, resulting in a
sample of 18 workers who participated in one of two semi-structured
focus groups. The groups were recorded and transcribed, and data
were analyzed according to a descriptive phenomenological approach.
Workers felt that many adoptive parents were poorly prepared for
the stress that accompanied parental demands, perhaps due in part
to the suddenness and unpredictable nature of the transition to
adoptive parenthood. One of the key challenges preventing adoption
workers from providing support to address this parenting stress was
the parents’ unwillingness to disclose the challenges they were
facing during the post-placement period. Even when parents
acknowledged their need for support around parenting stress,
workers felt that there were additional barriers to the provision
of this support, such as the unavailability of appropriate social
service resources. Workers also identified many challenges that
pertained to systemic processes within the child welfare system,
including their inability to support parents post-placement due to
other job-related demands, and the surveillance of parents in the
early post-placement months. Overall, workers clearly articulated
their desire to have a role in families’ well-being over the long
term, as well as an awareness of the challenges that families face
beyond six months post-placement, particularly when their formal
involvement with families end. The lack of financial support from
child welfare agencies after six months post-placement is
problematic, especially given the lack of publicly funded support
and adjustment services targeted to adoptive parents in
Toronto.
Milot, T., St-Laurent, D., Ethier, L.S., & Provost,
M.A. (2010). .
Child Maltreatment, 15(4), 293 –
304.
This study examined the relationship between neglect in childhood
and the manifestation of trauma-related symptoms during the
preschool period. The final sample included 105 children, including
72 non-neglected children and 33 children who had experienced
neglect, all of whom were from a Caucasian Francophone population
living in Quebec. The neglected children were recruited from child
protection agencies and were all receiving services for neglect at
the time of the study. The comparison group of non-neglected
children were mostly recruited from socioeconomically disadvantaged
families in the community. The two groups did not differ on main
demographic indicators, such as gender, child age, proportion of
mothers on welfare, or annual family income. Mother-child dyads
were observed once at home and once in a filmed laboratory visit.
Measures of trauma symptoms were completed by mothers and teachers.
The results indicate that according to teachers’ reports, children
who had experienced neglect showed more symptoms of post-traumatic
stress and dissociation than non-neglected children; interestingly,
these two groups did not differ according to mothers’ reports of
trauma symptoms. Mother-child dyads in the neglected group
displayed poorer quality affective communication compared to dyads
in the non-neglected group. Hierarchical regressions revealed that
after controlling for the contribution of child neglect, lower
quality dyadic communication between mother and child was
associated with more teacher-reported post-traumatic stress
symptoms in the child. The authors conclude that it may be helpful
to examine child neglect from a trauma perspective.
Mironova, P., Rhodes, A.E., Bethell, J.M., Tonmyr, L.,
Boyle, M.H., Wekerle, C., et al. (2011). . Vulnerable Children & Youth
Studies, 6(1), 1 – 7.
This systematic review examined studies that were school- or
population-based, reporting individual-level empirical results on
the association between child physical abuse and suicide related
behaviours in children and youth. Studies were only included if the
perpetrator of physical abuse was identified as a family member,
parental figure, or an adult in the home. Children and youth were
defined as those aged 18 years or younger, or in grade 12 or less
in school-based samples. A systematic literature search was
performed using multiple databases. Three cross sectional studies
were included as a result of this search. Two longitudinal studies
were also included, however the participants in these studies were
young adults rather than children and youth. Relevant data were
extracted from the five studies. Formal quality assessment rules
were not applied, and results were not pooled meta-analytically.
Studies were conducted in five countries, with sample sizes ranging
from 489 to 7,340. The results of this systematic review suggest
that child physical abuse is associated with suicide related
behaviours.Â
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