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Abstract
<p class="first" id="d119805e99">Child maltreatment research varies considerably in
how maltreatment is measured. Although
researchers have advocated for improvements in maltreatment assessment, a first step
is a clear understanding of the status on how the field operationalizes maltreatment.
The current paper sought to achieve this goal through reviewing research on child
maltreatment over a recent 10-year span to identify trends in maltreatment assessment
and operationalization. Information on maltreatment measurement was extracted from
338 articles across three major journals devoted to publishing research on child maltreatment.
Among the various definitional dimensions of maltreatment, type was the most common
way maltreatment was operationalized, followed by severity, frequency, and chronicity,
a stable trend across the 10-year span of review. The results indicated that the majority
of studies measured maltreatment as consisting of multiple types, although some studies
focused on one type of maltreatment as the indicator of child maltreatment. Further,
the most common assessment method was the administration of a questionnaire or the
combination of two questionnaires with the second most common being summaries from
case file review. Recommendations for future research are discussed.
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