Family and Child Welfare
Cross-source consensus on Family and Child Welfare from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
How it works
Benefits
Risks & contraindications
Comparisons
Highlighted claims
- Adolescent voluntary disclosure was the strongest predictor of parental knowledge about adolescents' activities. — The Swedish longitudinal Gothenland Millennium Cohort for studying wellbeing from early adolescence through adulthood
- Socioeconomic factors such as single-parent household status and low income were important drivers of child welfare referral. — The Swedish longitudinal Gothenland Millennium Cohort for studying wellbeing from early adolescence through adulthood
- Adolescent disclosure protected against mental health issues and risk behaviours, while behavioural control helped prevent criminal behaviour. — The Swedish longitudinal Gothenland Millennium Cohort for studying wellbeing from early adolescence through adulthood
- About one in five children was referred to Child Welfare Services, but referral patterns did not closely match self-reported severe exposure. — The Swedish longitudinal Gothenland Millennium Cohort for studying wellbeing from early adolescence through adulthood
- Parental solicitation did not show the same protective effect and could worsen outcomes for some adolescents. — The Swedish longitudinal Gothenland Millennium Cohort for studying wellbeing from early adolescence through adulthood