Data

Grandparents Matter: Optimising grandparent connections with their grandchildren after child protection concerns

James Cook University
Gair, S ; Zuchowski, I
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]] Cited: [[ro.stat.cited]] Accessed: [[ro.stat.accessed]]
ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/published/7dc6f117a457accf7a4676368a8b65b9&rft.title=Grandparents Matter: Optimising grandparent connections with their grandchildren after child protection concerns&rft.identifier=https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/published/7dc6f117a457accf7a4676368a8b65b9&rft.publisher=James Cook University&rft.description=Limited available literature explores the experiences of grandparents after child protection intervention. This partnerhsip research between James Cook University, Fin(WA), FIN (Qld- Townsville) and Act for Kids explored how grandparent–grandchild contact can be optimised after child-safety concerns in the family home.The community partners and social work researchers collaborated throughout the project. The community partners provided guidance and feedback on the research question and processes. They promoted the research within their organisation, networks and client groups, reviewed and contributed to the data analysis and findings, and were involved in drafting and reviewing manuscripts and blogs for dissemination.The research question posed was: What are the ways that the inclusion of grandparents can be optimised in child-protection intervention, out-of-home care and related services? The primary research aim was to document the narratives, perceptions and recommendations of participants, and contribute to current knowledge and practice. Semi-structured open-ended interviewquestions explored and identified ways to optimise the inclusion of grandparents in child-protection/out-of-home care/kinship care. Grandparents were primarily recruited for the study, although other groups were included in order to maximise researchers’ understanding. The research was approved through the university Human Ethics Committe.The final sample (n=77) included participants from Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia and Victoria. A total of thirty-nine interviews were undertaken in 2016; these consisted of twenty-eight individual interviews, three couple interviews and seven focus group interviews. The interviews took place face to face or over the telephone, utilising an interview guide. Interviews were undertaken by three members of the research collaboration.Participants contributed from various perspectives. The sample consisted of 51 grandparents, six foster carers (nonfamily), 12 parents, and eight workers. The grandparent sample consisted of 46 grandmothers  and five grandfathers. In total, 26 participants in the study identified as Aboriginal Australian and one participant identified as Torres Strait Islander.The following data is stored in the secure data section of the Tropical Data Hub (TDH) archive. The interview guides are available for download from the Data link below.Interview guidesTranscripts of individual and focus group interviewsRecordings of interviewsCodes for Analysis &rft.creator=Gair, S &rft.creator=Zuchowski, I &rft.date=2018&rft.relation=https://doi.org/10.1111/cfs.12464&rft.relation=https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcy085&rft.relation=https://theconversation.com/grandparents-must-be-included-in-decisions-about-children-in-out-of-home-care-85094&rft.relation=https://doi.org/10.11157/anzswj-vol31iss1id543&rft.relation=https://doi.org/10.1007/s1089&rft.coverage=146.96839905065,-19.490063261627 147.05291863825,-19.394987945906 147.10214497386,-19.279863023097 147.11125944077,-19.155928725456 147.07936985146,-19.035311243346 147.00959778112,-18.929837578335 146.90877300611,-18.849869995123 146.78676495792,-18.803277285198 146.65551663437,-18.794649028697 146.52787553583,-18.824835536522 146.41633606236,-18.890862474871 146.33181647476,-18.986229311757 146.28259013915,-19.101559698619 146.27347567224,-19.225534920166 146.30536526155,-19.346013153742 146.3751373319,-19.451220588268 146.4759621069,-19.530896652206 146.5979701551,-19.577283903574 146.72921847865,-19.585871237675 146.85685957718,-19.555823973818 146.96839905065,-19.490063261627&rft.coverage=144.03642273229,-36.983827815651 144.20185328054,-37.026129773586 144.37555610141,-37.025537237714 144.54052795254,-36.982107239676 144.68062023971,-36.90002353822 144.78211975377,-36.787212970903 144.8350910151,-36.654610942021 144.83434882756,-36.515132013372 144.77996584165,-36.38243065315 144.67726544292,-36.269563997908 144.53630066198,-36.187687893161 144.37087011372,-36.144923799065 144.19716729285,-36.145523133745 144.03219544172,-36.18942626879 143.89210315455,-36.272268731319 143.79060364049,-36.385833867706 143.73763237916,-36.51889804881 143.7383745667,-36.658370178361 143.79275755262,-36.790598385335 143.89545795134,-36.902706269759 144.03642273229,-36.983827815651&rft.coverage=139.05961609166,-35.019794779139 139.13016448369,-34.842298157814 139.13035742533,-34.655201897685 139.0601760301,-34.476820891156 138.92649014195,-34.32472831396 138.74238586705,-34.213992401724 138.52588461457,-34.15563269288 138.29817903555,-34.155473030519 138.08155853858,-34.213529363123 137.89722744719,-34.324008062434 137.76322937291,-34.475914968394 137.69268098088,-34.654199825725 137.69248803925,-34.841298353167 137.76266943448,-35.018894792193 137.89635532263,-35.169715669981 138.08045959752,-35.279178512265 138.29696085,-35.336750034797 138.52466642902,-35.336907430021 138.74128692599,-35.279635615336 138.92561801739,-35.170428584611 139.05961609166,-35.019794779139&rft.coverage=115.95536804479,-32.213880040484 116.11214256995,-32.158994457857 116.24120360132,-32.065718636865 116.32991774594,-31.94308306503 116.36960104523,-31.803002242492 116.35636902135,-31.659142777893 116.29151691701,-31.525602811025 116.18139290801,-31.415525591731 116.03677669966,-31.339785552822 115.87182433401,-31.305886027693 115.70268249791,-31.317190862702 115.54590797275,-31.37257790158 115.41684694138,-31.466554719783 115.32813279676,-31.589823075293 115.28844949747,-31.730226759322 115.30168152135,-31.8739758343 115.36653362569,-32.007014328101 115.47665763468,-32.116390544958 115.62127384304,-32.191497813777 115.78622620869,-32.225074491038 115.95536804479,-32.213880040484&rft.coverage=116.12042356191,-32.035864425244 116.12083219294,-32.035751871968 116.12117979525,-32.035537782531 116.12143234312,-32.035243112883 116.12156511539,-32.034896706724 116.12156511539,-32.03453247232 116.12143234312,-32.034186063472 116.12117979525,-32.033891389474 116.12083219294,-32.033677295688 116.12042356191,-32.033564739723 116.11999390182,-32.033564739723 116.11958527079,-32.033677295688 116.11923766847,-32.033891389474 116.11898512061,-32.034186063472 116.11885234834,-32.03453247232 116.11885234834,-32.034896706724 116.11898512061,-32.035243112883 116.11923766847,-32.035537782531 116.11958527079,-32.035751871968 116.11999390182,-32.035864425244 116.12042356191,-32.035864425244&rft.coverage=Bendigo, Victoria, Australia&rft.coverage=Adelaide, South Australia&rft.coverage=Perth, Western Australia&rft.coverage=Townsville, Queensland, Australia&rft_rights=&rft_subject=grandparent&rft_subject=child protection&rft_subject=kinship care&rft_subject=social work&rft_subject=grandchildren&rft_subject=foster carer&rft_subject=parent&rft_subject=SOCIAL WORK&rft_subject=STUDIES IN HUMAN SOCIETY&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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Full description

Limited available literature explores the experiences of grandparents after child protection intervention. This partnerhsip research between James Cook University, Fin(WA), FIN (Qld- Townsville) and Act for Kids explored how grandparent–grandchild contact can be optimised after child-safety concerns in the family home.

The community partners and social work researchers collaborated throughout the project. The community partners provided guidance and feedback on the research question and processes. They promoted the research within their organisation, networks and client groups, reviewed and contributed to the data analysis and findings, and were involved in drafting and reviewing manuscripts and blogs for dissemination.

The research question posed was: What are the ways that the inclusion of grandparents can be optimised in child-protection intervention, out-of-home care and related services? The primary research aim was to document the narratives, perceptions and recommendations of participants, and contribute to current knowledge and practice. Semi-structured open-ended interviewquestions explored and identified ways to optimise the inclusion of grandparents in child-protection/out-of-home care/kinship care. Grandparents were primarily recruited for the study, although other groups were included in order to maximise researchers’ understanding. The research was approved through the university Human Ethics Committe.

The final sample (n=77) included participants from Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia and Victoria. A total of thirty-nine interviews were undertaken in 2016; these consisted of twenty-eight individual interviews, three couple interviews and seven focus group interviews. The interviews took place face to face or over the telephone, utilising an interview guide. Interviews were undertaken by three members of the research collaboration.

Participants contributed from various perspectives. The sample consisted of 51 grandparents, six foster carers (nonfamily), 12 parents, and eight workers. The grandparent sample consisted of 46 grandmothers  and five grandfathers. In total, 26 participants in the study identified as Aboriginal Australian and one participant identified as Torres Strait Islander.

The following data is stored in the secure data section of the Tropical Data Hub (TDH) archive. The interview guides are available for download from the Data link below.

  1. Interview guides
  2. Transcripts of individual and focus group interviews
  3. Recordings of interviews
  4. Codes for Analysis

 

Notes

Data consists of 3 zip files containing the data analysis (8 MS Word files), interview guides (6 MS Word files) and the interview recordings and transcripts (54 MS Word files and 31 audio files (MP3 and 1 MPEG-4)).

MS Word documents have also been saved in PDF format and stored in similarly named zip files for preservation purposes.

Created: 2018-10-26

This dataset is part of a larger collection

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text: Bendigo, Victoria, Australia

text: Adelaide, South Australia

text: Perth, Western Australia

text: Townsville, Queensland, Australia

Subjects

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Identifiers
  • Local : 0aae4e67cfac2103caed58c3d0aeccce
  • Local : https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/published/7dc6f117a457accf7a4676368a8b65b9