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The nature and extent of domestic and family violence exposure for children and young people with disability Olivia Octoman, Martine Hawkes, Fernando Lima, Melissa O’Donnell, Carol Orr, Fiona Arney, Tim Moore, Sally Robinson, kylie valentine, Amy Marshall, Jala Burton, Chris Brebner

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: ANROWS Research reportPublication details: ANROWS, 2022Description: electronic document (78 pages) ; PDF fileISBN:
  • 978-1-922645-49-4 (PDF)
Subject(s): Online resources: ANROWS Research report, Issue 16, September 2022Summary: This report presents findings from Phase 1 of a larger project entitled “Connecting the dots: Understanding the domestic and family violence experiences of children and young people with disability within and across sectors”. Phase 1 used population-level, state-linked data from a cohort of children born in Western Australia from 1990 to 2009 to examine the extent of children with disability’s exposure to DFV. To further their analysis, the research team also used a random sample of child protection case files from within a metropolitan region within South Australia. The research found that children with disability are twice as likely to have a mother hospitalised due to a DFV assault (8% compared to 4%) and that, according to police and hospital data, children with disability made up approximately 30 per cent of children who had experienced DFV. Children with disability were also far more likely than children without disability to have child protection involvement and enter out-of-home care. (From the website). See also the final report from this project, Connecting the dots (#7862). Record #7861
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ANROWS Research report, Issue 16, September 2022

This report presents findings from Phase 1 of a larger project entitled “Connecting the dots: Understanding the domestic and family violence experiences of children and young people with disability within and across sectors”. Phase 1 used population-level, state-linked data from a cohort of children born in Western Australia from 1990 to 2009 to examine the extent of children with disability’s exposure to DFV. To further their analysis, the research team also used a random sample of child protection case files from within a metropolitan region within South Australia.

The research found that children with disability are twice as likely to have a mother hospitalised due to a DFV assault (8% compared to 4%) and that, according to police and hospital data, children with disability made up approximately 30 per cent of children who had experienced DFV. Children with disability were also far more likely than children without disability to have child protection involvement and enter out-of-home care. (From the website). See also the final report from this project, Connecting the dots (#7862). Record #7861

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