4.5 Article

The neglected ones: Time at home during COVID-19 and child maltreatment

Journal

CHILDREN AND YOUTH SERVICES REVIEW
Volume 131, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.childyouth.2021.106287

Keywords

Child abuse and neglect; COVID-19; Stay-at-home orders

Funding

  1. Georgia Tech EVPR's Rapid Response Seed Grant
  2. Doris Duke Fellowship for the Promotion of Child Well-Being

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The early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, characterized by extreme social isolation, precarious employment, and increased time spent at home, have impacted child health and well-being. Research shows that staying at home intensively resulted in a reduction of overall child maltreatment reports, but children in areas with longer stays were more likely to be victims of maltreatment, particularly neglect. This suggests that families need support as the pandemic continues and when it eventually ends.
The early months of the COVID-19 pandemic led to extreme social isolation, precarious employment and job loss, working from home while tending to children, and limited access to public services. The confluence of these factors likely affects child health and well-being. We combine early release child maltreatment reports in Indiana with unique and newly available mobile phone movement data to better understand the relationship between staying at home intensively during the COVID-19 pandemic and child maltreatment. Our findings indicate that the prolonged stays at home promoted by the early public health response to COVID-19 resulted in reductions in child maltreatment reports overall and substantiated reports of maltreatment. However, relative to areas that stayed home less, children in areas that stayed home more were more likely to be both reported for and a confirmed victim of maltreatment, particularly neglect. These areas have historically been socioeconomically advantaged and experienced lower rates of maltreatment. We only observe increases in confirmed child maltreatment in metropolitan counties, suggesting that the effects of staying home on child maltreatment may reflect both the differential risk of leaving home and access to services in metropolitan-rather than non-metropolitan-counties. Staying at home has been challenging for many families. Families likely need assistance as the pandemic persists, evolves, and when it ends.

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