Abstract

BackgroundMulti-professional approach to child protection decision making is widely promoted by service organisations, although the conditions for this to be effective are little known. ObjectiveThis systematic narrative literature review explored empirical evidence on the implementation of multi-professional child protection decision making in community settings. Of particular interest were the contextual conditions upon which joint working is build (inputs), aspects of interactional functioning (mediators), and the results of working together (outputs). Participants and settingFive electronic bibliographic databases were selected for the search. The review was restricted to articles published in peer-reviewed journals, in the English language for ten years, from 1st January 2010 to 31st December 2019. Of the 6934 studies retrieved, 30 studies undertaken in six countries were included. MethodsThe systematic approach to literature reviewing utilised was ‘Systematic Narrative Review’. This approach starts with clearly formulated questions, employs systematic, explicit, and replicable processes for searching the literature to retrieve research, retains quality appraisal limited to publications in peer-reviewed journals, and uses a narrative synthesis. ResultsThe analysis outlined key building blocks that form the structure for collaborative decision making and identified cognitive, relational, and behavioural interactional properties that occur when making decisions together. Limitations of the published literature hinder the ability of making robust inferences about outcomes of collaborative decision-making practice. ConclusionThe article discusses the next steps for research and implications for policy and practice for promoting useful multi-professional working in child protection decision making in the community.

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