Longitudinal Studies of Child Abuse and Neglect (LONGSCAN), Assessments
0-11
Dataset Number: 138
Investigator(s): LONGSCAN Consortium
Abstract:
LONGSCAN is a consortium of research studies operating
under common by-laws and procedures. It was initiated in 1991 with
grants from the National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect to a
coordinating center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill and five data collection sites. Each site is conducting a
separate and unique research project on the etiology and impact of
child maltreatment. While each project can stand on its own merits,
through the use of common assessment measures, similar data
collection methods and schedules, and pooled analyses, LONGSCAN is a
collaborative effort that is truly greater than the sum of its
parts.
The goal of LONGSCAN is to follow the 1300+ children and their
families until the children themselves become young adults.
Maltreatment data are collected from multiple sources, including
review of Child Protective Service records every two years. Yearly
telephone interviews allow the sites to track families and assess
yearly service utilization and important life events.
In addition to the specific focus of the individual studies, the
coordinated LONGSCAN design permits a comprehensive exploration of
many critical issues in child abuse and neglect on a combined sample
of sufficient size for unprecedented statistical power and
flexibility. Built into the LONGSCAN design is also the ability to
replicate and extend findings across a variety of ethnic, social and
economic subgroups.
The findings of LONGSCAN will provide a scientific basis for
policy-making, program planning, and targeting service delivery by
increasing our understanding of the following:
• the child, family, and community factors which increase the risk
for maltreatment in its different forms;
• the differential consequences of maltreatment, depending upon its
timing, duration, severity, and nature, and upon the child's age and
cultural environment;
• the child, family, and community factors (e.g., chronic exposure
to violence, parental substance abuse) that increase the harm caused
by different forms of maltreatment;
• the factors that increase the probability of positive child
outcomes despite maltreatment and other adverse life circumstances;
• the strengths and weaknesses of various societal interventions
such as child welfare programs, foster care, mental health services,
parenting classes, etc. Some of the sites are involved in
intervention research and evaluation of services, expediting the
integration of research findings into policy and practice.
Comprehensive assessments of children, their parents, and their
teachers have been completed at child ages 4, 6, and 8, and 12. The
age 12 data is not yet available to the child maltreatment
community. Annual caregiver telephone contact interviews have been
completed through child age 11. Data collection continues at child
ages 14, 16, and 18.
The
LONGSCAN
project page contains information about the measures used in the
study.
Video presentations on analyzing LONGSCAN:
LONGSCAN User
Support
List of LONGSCAN Publications:
LONGSCAN Publications
Download User's Guide (Data Codebook):
PDF
*Note: Special
LONGSCAN Access Procedures Apply*
