Child protection in times of Covid-19 and beyond: Countering the impact of stressors, constraints and uncertainties on families, professionals and organizations
- Funded by Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)
- Total publications:11 publications
Grant number: 210027
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Key facts
Disease
COVID-19Start & end year
20232026Known Financial Commitments (USD)
$479,309.59Funder
Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)Principal Investigator
Brinckmann ChristineResearch Location
SwitzerlandLead Research Institution
Departement Soziale Arbeit Institut für Kindheit, Jugend und Familie ZHAWResearch Priority Alignment
N/A
Research Category
Secondary impacts of disease, response & control measures
Research Subcategory
Social impacts
Special Interest Tags
N/A
Study Type
Non-Clinical
Clinical Trial Details
N/A
Broad Policy Alignment
Pending
Age Group
Children (1 year to 12 years)
Vulnerable Population
Unspecified
Occupations of Interest
Unspecified
Abstract
While international studies suggest the coronavirus pandemic has increased the prevalence of child abuse and neglect worldwide and has compromised the performance of national systems of child protection, the situation in Switzerland remains largely unknown. Several studies have been published on the well-being of children or adolescents in Switzerland during the pandemic more generally, but no study has systematically analyzed trends in child abuse and neglect or thoroughly examined the functioning of national, cantonal, or regional systems of child protection during this time.The proposed project is intended to fill this gap by providing empirical knowledge i) on the challenges that a range of organizations connected to the child protection system have faced during different stages of the Covid-19 pandemic, ii) how they have dealt with these challenges within their organizations and at their interfaces, iii) how these responses were perceived by parents and children in the child protection system, iv) how clients themselves experienced and dealt with problems particular to a pandemic, v) what outcomes have been observed for these organizational and personal responses, and vi) what may be learned from these combined experiences to better prepare the system for the event of another health emergency-or more generally, another acute societal crisis-in the future.To achieve these purposes, the project combines six work packages. Work package 1 will deliver two separate systematic literature reviews, one on the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on specific domains within national systems of child protection, and another on recommendations for policy changes and resilience-building that have been proposed in the scientific literature. Work package 2 contains a comprehensive institutional survey in the child protection systems of two cantons in the German-speaking part of Switzerland and two cantons in the Romandy. The cantons will serve as case studies, and the surveys will collect data on the incidence of child abuse and neglect cases in the participating institutions before and during the pandemic, along with professionals' quantitative and qualitative assessments of challenges ob-served. In work package 3, interviews with management and frontline workers from selected institutions will provide an in-depth understanding of the professionals' experiences and the conclusions drawn from them, while work package 4 will examine the perspectives of caregivers and their children in three types of child protection interventions ("parenting guardianships" according to Art. 308 para. 1 CC, intensive family support, and residential care). In work package 5, propositions derived from work packages 1 to 4 will be submitted to an inter-cantonal panel of experts, following a Delphi procedure. This will help to determine the generalizability of findings from the case studies with respect to other parts of Switzerland. Finally, in work package 6, a comprehensive research report will be written that organizes and interprets the empirical findings from a more theoretically driven perspective.The proposed study may identify gaps in service delivery during the Covid-19 pandemic and lead to the proposition of strategies for more effective prevention of child abuse and neglect and child protection interventions in times of health emergencies or comparable societal crises. By addressing researchers, professionals and policy-makers alike, it may contribute substantially to a more resilient system of child protection in Switzerland.
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