Is interviewer support associated with the reduced reluctance and enhanced informativeness of alleged child abuse victims?

Law and Human Behavior
Uri BlasbalgElizabeth C Ahern

Abstract

Child maltreatment victims are often reluctant to report abuse when formally interviewed. Evidence-based guidelines like the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Standard Investigative Interview Protocol do not adequately address such reluctance because they are focused on cognitive rather than socioemotional strategies. The present study was designed to determine whether the Revised National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Protocol, which emphasizes supportive interviewing more than the standard protocol does, might predict increases in the overall informativeness and reductions in the reluctance of alleged victims. A total of 254 interviews, 166 using the revised protocol and 88 using the standard protocol, were conducted with 4.06- to 13.98-year-old children (M = 9.20, SD = 2.49) who disclosed multiple incidents of physical abuse by their parents and were thus expected to be more reluctant than victims of extrafamilial abuse. We coded indices of interviewer support and question types, children's reluctance, and informativeness in each utterance during the substantive phases of the interviews. The Revised Protocol was associated with better interviewer support and questioning as well as red...Continue Reading

Citations

Nov 5, 2019·Child Development·Kaila C BruerKang Lee
Apr 15, 2020·Psychiatry, Psychology, and Law : an Interdisciplinary Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association of Psychiatry, Psychology and Law·Heather S Canning, Carole Peterson
Jan 14, 2021·Development and Psychopathology·Irit HershkowitzYael Karni-Visel
Mar 1, 2021·Child Abuse & Neglect·Hayden M HendersonThomas D Lyon
Dec 30, 2021·Child Maltreatment·Yael Karni-ViselUri Blasbalg

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