Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
347647 Children and Youth Services Review 2006 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

Sixty-one parents, mainly mothers, in two mid-size Ontario (Canada) cities were interviewed about their experiences with Child Protective Services (CPS) agencies, one in each city. The interviewers took a semi-structured approach that focussed on learning about the challenges in the parents' daily lives (to be reported in a future paper), and their perceptions of CPS interventions. Four researchers, including the three authors, developed a coding scheme to analyze the interviews, using the qualitative software package QSR NUD*IST Vivo. The findings indicated that parents valued good referrals, concrete help, and emotional support, although the latter was mentioned by only a minority of parents. Their most negative experiences were: having their initial requests for help turned down; being accepted for service, but not receiving much help; being unfairly treated or harrassed; and being traumatized by the sudden, police-like removal of their children. The paper discusses how the context of these two agencies may have contributed to the findings: increasing poverty among families with children, and the effects of an ultra-conservative government, who introduced a legalistic, investigative agenda for CPS beginning in 1995. The paper discusses how workers and agencies could modify services to maximize the parents' positive experiences and minimize their negative experiences.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Perinatology, Pediatrics and Child Health
Authors
, , ,