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Process / pipelineDecision-support assessment systems

Structured Decision Making

Structured Decision Making (SDM) is a child-welfare case-management system that brings consistency to the most consequential decisions in a case — whether to investigate, whether a child is safe, how high the risk of future maltreatment is, what the family needs, and whether to close — by applying a standardized, research-based assessment tool at each of these decision points. Developed by the Children's Research Center (now Evident Change) around the actuarial-risk work of Christopher Baird, Dennis Wagner, and colleagues, SDM aims to reduce the wide variability and bias of unaided judgment and to target resources where they matter most.

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Lähteet

  1. Baird, C., Wagner, D., Healy, T., & Johnson, K. (1999). Risk assessment in child protective services: Consensus and actuarial model reliability. Child Welfare, 78(6), 723–748. link
  2. Baird, 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: 10.1016/S0190-7409(00)00122-5

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ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Structured Decision Making System for Child Welfare. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/fi/social-work/structured-decision-making-child-welfare

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ScholarGateStructured Decision Making (Structured Decision Making System for Child Welfare). Haettu 2026-06-24 osoitteesta https://scholargate.app/fi/social-work/structured-decision-making-child-welfare · Aineisto: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026