Référence
Charest-Belzile, D. Drapeau, S. et Ivers, H. (2020). Parental Engagement in Child Protection Services: A Multidimensional, Longitudinal and Interactive Framework. Children and Youth Services Review, 116, 105162.
Résumé
Parental engagement in child protective services could contribute to positive outcomes, such as maltreatment rates diminution, parents’ therapeutic goals achievement, family reunification following out of home placement and well-being enhancement for both parents and children. Described as an evolving and multidimensional phenomenon, parental engagement entails three interrelated components: (1) parent attitudes toward the intervention, (2) parent-caseworker relationship and (3) parent participation in the intervention process. This study aims to contribute to the understanding of mechanisms underlying the development of parental engagement over the course of a child protection intervention. It establishes longitudinal relations between the three dimensions and precises the role played by caseworkers' practices in the process. Parents from Quebec, Canada (n = 123) having at least one child placed out of home took part to 2 telephonic interviews based on validated questionnaires. Path analysis have been conducted in two steps. Results show high-quality relationship among parents and practitioner predicts more positive attitudes during intervention. Practitioners’ practices would also have an effect on collaboration emergence. This research emphasizes the crucial role played by services provider in child protection. To maximize benefits for parents and children, practices promoting engagement and focusing on parent-caseworker collaboration should thus be integrated to training and consider a standard.




