Abstract

Local authorities in England are required to routinely collect administrative data on children in care and cross-sectional analyses of national data are published by central government. This paper explores the usefulness of undertaking a longitudinal analysis of these data at local authority level to determine the care pathways for children entering care, differentiating by age at entry. The sample consisted of 2208 children who entered care in one English local authority over a six-year period, and who were followed up for at least 2 years. A logistic regression model was fitted to explore factors associated with children staying long term in care. Age at entry was a key determinant of where children ended up (return to a parent, special guardianship or residence order, adoption or staying long term in care). Only a minority of entrants (mainly those entering care in their middle years) remained in longer term care. For the vast majority of children, the ‘pre-care family context’ remains important as children will either return to parents or relatives or stay in touch with them. The findings are used to urge service planners to make full use of data on care entrants, especially age at entry, when deciding on the balance between the different placement options needed, and the social work service delivery models.

Highlights

  • In England, central government collects data annually from local authorities on every child they ‘looked after’ any point during the year in a dataset known as the SSDA903

  • Cross-sectional statistics are published about the settings in which children are placed and where they go on leaving care

  • The central government does not publish any longitudinal analysis of children's pathways over the years from care entry to exit, this is possible using the unique identifier for each child within the SSDA903 dataset

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Summary

Introduction

In England, central government collects data annually from local authorities on every child they ‘looked after’ any point during the year in a dataset known as the SSDA903. ‘Looked after’ children are essentially children in voluntary care and children for whom the local authority holds a care or protection order. The DfE publishes summary statistics each year These provide annual snapshots of the care system and the means by which to assess trends over time. The central government does not publish any longitudinal analysis of children's pathways over the years from care entry to exit (or staying in care), this is possible using the unique identifier for each child within the SSDA903 dataset

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