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Possible factors supporting cross-agency collaboration in child abuse cases : a scoping review James Herbert, Nicholas Ghan, Mary Salveron and Wendy Walsh

By: Herbert, James.
Contributor(s): Ghan, Nicholas | Salveron, Mary | Walsh, Wendy.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Journal of Child Sexual Abuse.Publisher: Taylor & Francis, 2020Subject(s): CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE | CHILD ABUSE | INFORMATION SHARING | INTERAGENCY COLLABORATION | INTERVENTION | LITERATURE REVIEWS | SOCIAL SERVICES | SUPPORT SERVICES | INTERNATIONAL | AUSTRALIA | UNITED KINGDOM | UNITED STATESOnline resources: DOI: 10.1080/10538712.2020.1856994 In: Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 2020, Advance online publication, 14 December 2020Summary: Cross-agency collaboration for responding to child abuse cases is critical for the safety and wellbeing of children. However, working effectively across organizational boundaries can be difficult, especially where there are considerable disciplinary differences. Accordingly, many jurisdictions have put in place policies and processes to support cross-agency collaboration across groups responding to severe child abuse. The aim of this scoping review was to highlight key factors that may influence the quality of cross-agency collaboration in severe child abuse cases. A systematic search comprising 57 empirical studies examining the facilitators and/or barriers to cross-agency collaboration in child abuse cases was undertaken identifying eleven factors. This review found the most commonly cited factor was the need to reconcile the different roles/mandates of workers with their roles in a cross-agency response. A clear cross-agency protocol that establishes agreed procedures was also a commonly cited factor, along with cross-agency training, and communication and information sharing practices. This scoping review highlighted the lack of high-quality evidence that could be used to assess the effectiveness of policies and processes to support cross-agency collaboration for child abuse cases, and targeted areas for future research to enhance the quality of evidence for this common type of program/intervention. (Authors' abstract). Record #7022
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Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 2020, Advance online publication, 14 December 2020

Cross-agency collaboration for responding to child abuse cases is critical for the safety and wellbeing of children. However, working effectively across organizational boundaries can be difficult, especially where there are considerable disciplinary differences. Accordingly, many jurisdictions have put in place policies and processes to support cross-agency collaboration across groups responding to severe child abuse. The aim of this scoping review was to highlight key factors that may influence the quality of cross-agency collaboration in severe child abuse cases. A systematic search comprising 57 empirical studies examining the facilitators and/or barriers to cross-agency collaboration in child abuse cases was undertaken identifying eleven factors. This review found the most commonly cited factor was the need to reconcile the different roles/mandates of workers with their roles in a cross-agency response. A clear cross-agency protocol that establishes agreed procedures was also a commonly cited factor, along with cross-agency training, and communication and information sharing practices. This scoping review highlighted the lack of high-quality evidence that could be used to assess the effectiveness of policies and processes to support cross-agency collaboration for child abuse cases, and targeted areas for future research to enhance the quality of evidence for this common type of program/intervention. (Authors' abstract). Record #7022