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The remote work of child protection professionals during COVID-19: A scoping review and thematic analysis

journal contribution
posted on 2024-04-08, 13:50 authored by Carmit Katz, Noa Cohen, Afnan Attrash-Najjar, Talia Glucklich, Ma'ayan Jacobson, Natalia Varela, Sidnei Rinaldo Priolo-Filho, Olivia D Chang, Sadiyya Haffejee, David Kaawa-Mafigiri, Ilan Katz, Kathryn Maguire-Jack, Nadia Massarweh, George M Tarabulsy, Diane LevineDiane Levine, Christine Wekerle

Background

The COVID-19 pandemic created new challenges and barriers for the work of child protection professionals (CPPs) and intensified existing hardships for families and children, increasing the risk of child maltreatment. As new restrictions and precautions were implemented by governments worldwide to stop the virus from spreading, CPPs had to adapt to a new reality of working remotely. However, limited research has investigated how remote work impacted CPPs and child protection work and how CPPs handled this alternative work style.


Objective

This review aims to address gaps in the research to reveal the creative and effective approaches CPPs developed to overcome the challenges presented by COVID-19, defined as the ‘positive legacy’ of CPPs, particularly in adapting to remote work challenges.


Method

This review was conducted using a scoping review, followed by two rounds of thematic analysis. The scoping review was conducted in six languages: Hebrew, Arabic, French, Portuguese, Spanish, and English.


Results

The first round of thematic analysis found 18 articles relevant to this review. The second round extracted two main themes: 1) the challenges of remote work and 2) overcoming the challenges of no contact.


Conclusions

The findings of this review may be used to inform future strategies for child protection during a pandemic. They also provide an opportunity to rethink the relationship child protection work has with technology to systematically reform current and future protection policies and practices, including outside of a pandemic.

History

Author affiliation

College of Social Sci Arts and Humanities/Criminology & Sociology

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Child Abuse & Neglect

Pagination

106759

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0145-2134

Copyright date

2024

Notes

24 month embargo - AAM requested from author

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Diane Levine

Deposit date

2024-03-28

Data Access Statement

Data will be made available on request.

Rights Retention Statement

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