z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Maternal adversity and variation in the rate of children entering local authority care during infancy in England: a longitudinal ecological study
Author(s) -
Rachel Pearson,
Matthew A Jay,
Linda Wijlaars,
Bianca De Stavola,
Stuart Bedston,
Ruth Gilbert
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of population data science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.602
H-Index - 7
ISSN - 2399-4908
DOI - 10.23889/ijpds.v4i3.1330
Subject(s) - demography , medicine , population , census , public health , case mix index , health care , local authority , mental health , pediatrics , family medicine , psychiatry , environmental health , nursing , economic growth , public administration , sociology , political science , economics
BackgroundIn England, the rate at which infants enter care varies considerably by local authority, with little evidence on what drives these differences. Decisions instigating infant entry into care may be triggered by child protection concerns arising from parental ill-health or risky behaviour from pregnancy onwards. Main AimWe explored the extent to which adversity indicated within women’s hospitalisation history, pre-delivery, explained differences in rate of infant entry into care between local authorities. Methods/ApproachCombining data from several sources (Office for National Statistics Population Estimates, Public Health England Fingertips, 2011 Census, Children Looked After Return, and Hospital Episode Statistics), we derived population-level predictors for entry into care (i.e. local case-mix) for 131 English local authorities from 2006/07 to 2013/14. Our primary outcome was rate of infant entry into care. We used linear mixed-effects models to analyse the relationship between the outcome and percentage of live births with maternal history of adversity-related hospital admissions (i.e. any admission indicating substance misuse, mental ill-health, or violence, up to 36 months pre-delivery), adjusting for other case-mix measures. ResultsRate of infant entry into care (mean: 85.16 per 10,000 [min-max: 0.00-318.51]) and percentage of live births with maternal history of adversity-related hospital admissions (4.62%, [0.52-16.19%]) varied greatly by local authority. Prevalence of maternal adversity accounted for 24% of variation in rate of entry (95% CI: 14-35%). After adjustment, there was evidence that a percentage point increase in prevalence of maternal adversity - both over time and between local authorities - is associated with an extra 2.56 infants, per 10,000, entering care (1.31-3.82). Conclusion Prevalence of maternal adversity prior to birth helps to explain differing rates of infant entry into care among local authorities. Further research using individual-level linked parent-child data is required to ascertain whether interventions to reduce maternal adversity before birth would decrease rate of infant entry into care.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here