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Child Welfare Risk Assessment×Evidence-Based Practice Process×
FachgebietSocial WorkSocial Work
FamilieProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Entstehungsjahr20001996
UrheberChristopher Baird, Dennis Wagner & the actuarial child-welfare risk tradition (Children's Research Center)Evidence-based medicine tradition (Sackett et al.); translated to social work by Gambrill and others
TypEstimation of the likelihood of future child maltreatment to guide service decisionsStructured process for integrating evidence, expertise, and client values in practice decisions
Wegweisende QuelleBaird, C., & Wagner, D. (2000). The relative validity of actuarial- and consensus-based risk assessment systems. Children and Youth Services Review, 22(11–12), 839–871. DOI ↗Sackett, D. L., Rosenberg, W. M. C., Gray, J. A. M., Haynes, R. B., & Richardson, W. S. (1996). Evidence based medicine: What it is and what it isn't. BMJ, 312(7023), 71–72. DOI ↗
AliasnamenChild Protective Services Risk Assessment, Family Risk Assessment, Actuarial Risk Assessment (Child Welfare), Risk of Future Maltreatment AssessmentEBP Process, Evidence-Based Practice (Process Model), Five-Step EBP Process, Evidence-Informed Practice Process
Verwandt44
ZusammenfassungChild welfare risk assessment estimates the likelihood that a child will be maltreated in the future, in order to guide decisions about case opening, service intensity, and ongoing monitoring. Actuarial systems — the most validated form, advanced by Christopher Baird, Dennis Wagner, and colleagues — score a small set of empirically weighted case characteristics into a risk level that statistically predicts future maltreatment, and have been shown to outperform consensus-based clinical judgment in reliability and predictive validity. Risk assessment is distinct from, and complementary to, the safety assessment that addresses immediate danger.The evidence-based practice (EBP) process is a structured, five-step way of making practice decisions by integrating the best available research evidence with professional expertise and the client's values and circumstances. Originating in evidence-based medicine as defined by Sackett and colleagues and translated into social work by Eileen Gambrill and others, it reframes EBP not as a fixed list of approved programs but as a transparent decision process — ask, acquire, appraise, apply, assess — that an individual practitioner carries out with and for a particular client.
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ScholarGateMethoden vergleichen: Child Welfare Risk Assessment · Evidence-Based Practice Process. Abgerufen am 2026-06-25 von https://scholargate.app/de/compare