Title: Child wellbeing Indicators for Social Development
1Child wellbeing Indicators for Social Development
Child Youth, Family Social Development research
programme Human Sciences Research Council Cape
Town, South Africa (www.hsrc.ac.za)
adawes_at_hsrc.ac.za Presented to the Department of
Health Social Development Limpopo 21 February
2007
2Outline
- Who are we? The HSRC
- ME quick review
- Indicators
- A rights-based approach to monitoring child
well-being - Some examples
3Who are we? www.hsrc.ac.za
- Status Research Council established by Act of
Parliament 1968 / 2007. - Structure 4 National Research Programmes (plus
centres) offices in 3 Regions - Mandate
- to undertake research in the human and social
sciences - to provide advice on social science research and
the utilization of research to the benefit of the
country - to co-operate with national and international
research counterparts as well as users of
research - to publish and disseminate research findings.
4ME Review Programme Evaluation
- The systematic collection of information about
the activities, characteristics, and outcomes of
programs in order to - evaluate the programmes effectiveness in
achieving intended outcomes and goals. - improve effectiveness, and/or inform decisions
about future programming. - Add to the data on what works (is effective) in a
particular field.
5Main Purposes of M E (1)
- Internal
- To assist programme staff to do a better job.
- M E is a fundamental tool to improve practices
and strengthen your programme. - M E helps you find out what works for which
participants at what cost. - M E is therefore an ethical practice.
6Main Purposes of M E (2)
- External
- To advance good practice through gathering
evidence as to what works and what does not. - Allows us to ensure that what we only go to scale
with what works. - To improve the state of knowledge on how to
improve child / family / community outcomes. - Enables us to be accountable for what we do.
7ME Review Monitoring
- Refers to the systematic process of tracking all
relevant aspects of an intervention. Used in
process evaluation. - In order to enable one to judge both the quality
of programme delivery (programme inputs) and the
outcomes (effectiveness) we require - An effective information system for recording the
goals, resources, inputs, activities outcomes
of the programme. - The development of good indicators and simple
measures of delivery (inputs integrity etc),
outcomes and if possible, impacts.
8Why have indicators?
- The primary purposes of indicators are
- To provide decision-makers with information to
influence policy development, programme
implementation, resource allocation and services - To raise public awareness about peoples needs
and circumstances - To facilitate the monitoring and evaluation of
social policies, services and programmes.
9What are indicators?
- Indicators provide information. Indicators point
to something e.g. Childrens risk of injury. - Indicators are normally (but not always)
quantitative. - When measured across time, they point to changes
(or consistencies) in the situation. - Indicators are derived from one or more measures.
- These must be a reliable, and an accurate gauge
of the specific phenomenon (child status service
coverage etc). - Indicators are like the instruments on the
dashboard.
10Child Indicators
- Tell us how well our children are doing, whether
our services are good enough and whether there
are enough of them (coverage) - Assist us to develop and target policy and target
interventions for children - Assist us to monitor whether our interventions
make a difference to children - Tell us whether or not we are wasting our limited
finances - Help us advocate for children and show why it is
good to invest in children.
11A rights-Based Approach to monitoring Child
Well-being
- Draws on local and international Child Rights
provisions - Specifies the rights assess delivery on rights
assess child outcomes (monitor duty bearers as
well as children) - Incorporates the childs present while using a
developmental perspective (wellbeing well
becoming) - Assesses both positive and negative outcomes for
children - Where possible uses public administrative data
and surveys - Generates child-centered statistics
- Documents the relationship between the quality of
childrens environments and child outcomes, and - Considers the timing of measurement the cost of
data collection and the availability of good
data - http//www.hsrcpress.ac.za/product.php?productid2
200
12What is a Child-centered Statistic?
- It provides a view of the situation from the
childs perspective! - Lets look at two ways of describing households
- Adult-centered The proportion of workless
households in the district. - Child-centered The proportion of children living
in workless households in the district!
13How it works The Rights Component
- Identify the rights held by children (e.g. The
2006 Childrens Act) - Measure achievement of the rights (e.g. to
survival, development, protection) by monitoring
the status of children. - Identify who is responsible for ensuring the
delivery of rights (e.g. access to school
health quality of services quality of housing
neighbourhoods) so as to monitor duty bearer
performance in regard to delivery.
14How it works The Well-being component
- The Rights approach is combined with a Well-being
approach which - Emphasises the whole child
- Covers a range of domains of functioning (e.g.
Health education protection) - Is informed by evidence on factors that influence
the course of child development and can be
addressed in policy and intervention.
15What is child well-being?
- 5 broad outcome areas really matter to childrens
well-being - Economic well being having sufficient income and
material comfort to be able to take advantage of
opportunities - Being healthy enjoying good physical and mental
health and living a healthy lifestyle - Staying safe being protected from harm and
neglect and growing up able to look after
themselves - Enjoying and achieving getting the most out of
life and developing broad skills for adulthood - Making a positive contribution developing the
skills and attitudes to contribute to the society
in which they live
16Rights-based Child Wellbeing Monitoring
17How does our model apply to policy and
interventions? Five indicator Types
- Child status Who are the vulnerable children you
want to assist (and from which population)? What
outcomes do you want to promote your indicators
of wellbeing / realisation of rights. - Home Contexts What is their living context? Do
you intervene a this level? If so what changes do
you want? - Surrounding environment What community level
risks exist? What inputs do you want to see? - Access to services What of children have
access to grants health services ECD etc? - Service quality. And what is the quality of the
service rendered?
18Indicators developed for
- Childrens Contexts The home and neighbourhood
environments - Child Poverty (mapped at small area level)
- Child Survival and Health (including HIV AIDS)
- Education Development (including ECD
Disability) - Child Protection (maltreatment juvenile justice
street children trafficking commercial sexual
exploitation). - OutputTechnical volume plus user friendly Core
Sets
19EXAMPLE 1
- Child Protection (CP)
- What is it you want to measure (the issue of
definition?)! - Where is the data?
- Can one get it regularly?
- Is the quality OK?
20Child Abuse data The Tip of the Iceberg
Reported Cases
Unsubstantiated Reports
?
Substantiated Investigations Child Court
SAPS
Unreported Cases
Unknown Cases
Thanks to Peter Dudding Child Welfare Canada for
the graphic
21Child Protection (CP) indicators
- Indicator Child Maltreatment Incidence Rate
- Measure
- Denominator The proportion of children in a
specific area (province or admin. District)
referred to a Childrens Court Inquiry in a
specific year. - Numerator Child population of the province or
district - Rate Report per 1000 of the child population
within each DoJ district and province. - Source Department of Justice.
- Period Annual Statistics
22CCI Data Incidence of Probable Maltreatment per
1000 children by selected districts
23Child Protection (CP) indicators
- Data Quality is really important!!!!!
- Is SAPS data useful for telling you whether or
not the risk of sexual assault on children is
going up or down? - In a Western Cape study we found that for SAPS
crime data, the age of the rape victim was
unknown in - 60 of cases for 2003
- 82 of cases 2004 ..!
24Next Step Admin Data Local Geography Using
court maltreatment data to plan Protective
Services for children
\
Risk Areas
Risk Areas
Areas where young children are at most at risk
Services
25EXAMPLE 2
Mapping and Tracking Child Poverty The South
African Index of Multiple Deprivation 2001
(SAIMDC) Team Oxford Noble, Wright, Barnes
HSRC/UCT Dawes http//www.hsrcpress.ac.za/produ
ct.php?productid2217cat0page1featured
26A Model of Child Poverty
27Key Features of the Multi-dimensional Approach to
Child Poverty
- A multidimensional absolute poverty core (the
minimum) - A multidimensional relative poverty component
that addresses the childs capacity to
participate in society (poverty relative to
others in society) - Appropriate domains of deprivation (risks to
children) - Take into account access to quality services
- Be child-centred the child is the unit of
analysis the poverty that is measured must be
relevant to the life of the child, and children
should be involved in defining poverty - Be adjusted for different age groups of children.
28The SAIMDC-2001Domains
- Income and Material deprivation
- Employment deprivation
- Education deprivation
- Adequate Care Deprivation
- Living Environment deprivation
291 The Income/Material Deprivation Domain
- This domain aims to capture the proportions of
children experiencing income/material deprivation
in an area. - Numerator Number of children living in
households where - household equivalent income below 40 of the
national mean (ltR850 per month) - without a refrigerator
- with neither a TV nor a radio.
- Denominator Total children
302 The Employment Domain
- This domain measures the proportion of children
living in workless households in an area - Numerator Number of children living in
households where no adults aged 18 or over are in
employment - Denominator Total children
313 The Education Domain
- The purpose of the domain is to capture the
extent of childrens deprivation in education in
an area - Numerator
- Number of children (aged 9-15 inclusive) who are
in the wrong grade for their age, or - Number of children (aged 7-15 inclusive) who are
not in school. - Denominator Number of children of the relevant
age bands.
324 The Living Environment Domain
- The purpose of this domain is to identify
children in poor quality living environments. - Numerator Number of children living in
households - With no piped water inside their dwelling or in
their yard - With no use of electricity for lighting
- Living in a shack
- With no pit latrine with ventilation or flush
toilet - With no access to a telephone
- That are crowded (Canadian National Occupancy
Standard). - Denominator Total children
335 Adequate Care Domain
- The purpose of the domain is to capture
children who lack adequate care in an area - Numerator
- Number of children (aged 0-17 inclusive) whose
mother and father are no longer alive or not
living in the household - Number of children (aged 0-17 inclusive) living
in a child-headed household (HH with 0 gt 18yrs). - Denominator Number of children
34(No Transcript)
35M E EXAMPLE 3
Evaluating the outcomes and impact of
interventions to improve early childhood health
and psychological development
36Evidence Investing in ECD promotes well-being
and well-becoming
Cost-benefit
Optimal Investment Levels
School
ECD
Post School
Source Heckman Carneiro Human Social Policy,
2003, Voices for America and the Child and Family
Policy Center. Early Learning Left out An
Examination of Public Investment in Education and
Development by Child Age, 2004
37TheChallenge! E.G Improving ECD
Programme Goals 1 More Jobs for ECD 2 Better
child Outcomes
Programme Outcomes A Centres
Programme Activities
Desired Programme Outcomes Improved Child
Status
- A
- Facility Examples
- Education training for various job levels
-
- Strengthening service integration
- Examples
- Increased Access to integrated quality ECD
Services - More ECD Jobs
Possible Target Groups / Sites A ECD Centre
Staff B Family programme staff
- Examples
- Improved
- Nutritional Status
- Language Dev.
- Cognitive Dev.
- Early Literacy
- Desired Impact
- Grade R
- Readiness to learn
Programme Outcomes B Families-Caregivers
Demonstration Programme Training and Jobs for
ECD
B Family Programme Examples Caregiver
support Education for stimulation Parenting
skills HBC interventions
- Examples
- Improved caregiver wellbeing
- Improved parenting skills and stimulation of the
childs development
38Impact Child Caregiver Outcomes
- Child IMR and lt5MR
- Child Hunger Under Weight Stunting Rates
- Child under 2 years with moderate and severe
disabilities - Child Motor, language, cognitive, social and
emotional developmental outcomes assessed in
Grade R Grade 3 (outcome data linked to
assessments of ECD site quality) - Caregiver Caregiver behaviour outcomes following
programmes designed to improve their care and
stimulation of children in the home environment
(e.g. home visiting).
39Supports for Early Development in the household
- Caregiver health status HIV caregivers on
Anti-Retroviral Therapy - Caregiver literacy rate (ABET cover)
- Home stimulation of language numeracy
(UNICEF-MICS) - Children living in households without
- food security
- access to potable water
- in households without access to adequate
sanitation - access to electricity
- access to adequate housing or shelter.
- Neighbourhood safety (violent crime patterns).
40Thank You adawes_at_hsrc.ac.za