Identify the number of assigned physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse, and/or neglect investigations prior to the investigation resulting in the current case, regardless of whether the allegations were substantiated, inconclusive, or unfounded.
Do not include referrals that were not assigned for investigation or investigations of out-of-home perpetrators (e.g., daycare) unless one or more caregivers failed to protect.
Choose “a” if no child in the household exhibits characteristics listed below.
Choose “b” if any child in the household exhibits characteristics listed below and select all types present.
Identify alcohol/drug use by the caregiver(s) during the review period, whether there is a current problem that interferes with caregiver functioning or family functioning, and if so, how the caregiver(s) has addressed the problem during the review period.
Non-abusive use of legal prescription drugs or over-the-counter medications should not be identified as an issue.
If both caregivers have a substance abuse problem, rate the more negative behavior of the two caregivers.
Not addressing the problem since the last assessment/reassessment includes:Not addressing the problem includes a caregiver who during the review period:
Choose “a” if the primary caregiver does not have a current or past mental health problem.
Choose “b” if there is a history of mental health problems, but within the last year, there is no mental health problem that requires intervention.
Choose “c” if there is a mental health problem, and the problem is being addressed.
Choose “d” if there is a mental health problem, and the problem is not being addressed.
Identify whether a caregiver is actively engaged in achieving the case plan objectives specified in the case plan and is demonstrating skills/behaviors that will enable the caregiver to create, and maintain, safety for the child (e.g., ability to manage substance use/abuse; ability to resolve conflict constructively and respectfully; using age appropriate, non-physical discipline in conjunction with appropriate boundary setting; developing a mutually supportive relationship with a partner).
“Case plan objectives” specifically refers to the service objective type in the CWS/CMS case plan, identifying the changes in caregiver behavior necessary to create and maintain safety.
If there are two caregivers, rate progress for each. If progress differs between caregivers, score the item based on the caregiver who is demonstrating the least amount of participation/progress.
a. Demonstrates new skills and behaviors consistent with all family case plan objectives and is actively engaged to maintain objectives. Choose “a” if the caregiver is regularly demonstrating all behavioral changes identified in the case plan objectives and is able to create long-term safety for children in the household. The caregiver is actively engaged in activities to maintain the objectives.
b. Demonstrates some new skills and behaviors consistent with family case plan objectives and is actively engaged in activities to achieve objectives. Choose “b” if the caregiver is demonstrating some new skills and behavioral change consistent with case plan objectives and is actively engaged in achieving the objectives, but is not regularly demonstrating the behaviors necessary to create long-term safety in all areas.
c. Minimally demonstrates new skills and behaviors consistent with case plan objectives and/or has been inconsistently engaged in obtaining the objectives specified in the case plan. Choose “c” if the caregiver is demonstrating minor behavioral change consistent with family case plan outcomes but has made little progress toward changing their behavior and is not actively engaged in achieving the objectives. Caregiver behavior continues to make it difficult to create safety or may contribute to immediate danger of serious harm.
d. Does not demonstrate new skills and behaviors consistent with case plan objectives and/or refuses engagement. Choose “d” if the caregiver has not demonstrated behavioral change consistent with family service plan objectives. The caregiver refuses services, sporadically follows the case plan, or has not demonstrated the necessary skills/behaviors due to a failure or inability to participate. The caregiver is unable to create or maintain safety or their behavior is likely to contribute to immediate danger of serious harm.
1. Sexual abuse case AND the perpetrator is likely to have access to the child. One or more of the children in this household are or have been victims of sexual abuse AND the perpetrator is likely to have unmanaged access.
2. Non-accidental injury to a child under age 2. Any child under 2 years old in the household has any kind of physical injury resulting from the actions or inactions of a caregiver.
3. Severe non-accidental injury. Any child in the household has a serious physical injury resulting from the action or inaction of the caregiver. The caregiver caused serious injury, defined as brain damage, skull or bone fracture, subdural hemorrhage or hematoma, dislocations, sprains, internal injuries, poisoning, burns, scalds, or severe cuts, AND the child requires medical treatment.
4. Caregiver action or inaction resulted in death of a child due to abuse or neglect. Any child in the household has died as a result of actions or inactions by the caregiver. This child fatality may have occurred prior to the current case.
Assign the family's risk level based on the following chart.
Score | Level |
---|---|
0-1 | Low |
2-4 | Moderate |
5-7 | High |
8+ | Very High |
Final Risk Level | Recommendation |
---|---|
Low | Close* |
Moderate | Close* |
High | Continue Services |
Very High | Continue Services |
Indicate whether a policy override condition exists. Consider only the most recent review period. Presence of one or more mandatory override conditions increases the risk level to very high.
A discretionary override is used by the assigned worker whenever the worker believes that the risk score does not accurately portray the household’s actual risk level. Unlike the initial risk assessment, in which the worker could only increase the risk level, the risk reassessment permits the worker to increase or decrease the risk level by one level. The reason a worker may now decrease the risk level is that after a minimum of six months, the worker has acquired significant knowledge of the household. If the worker applies a discretionary override, the reason should be specified and the final risk level should be selected.