The pandemic has robbed Hawaii’s child protective workers of one of the most reliable reporters of abuse: teachers and other school workers.
With school out and children at home, the sources of child abuse reporting have changed, according to data provided to Civil Beat by the state .
While reports from teachers and others in schools dropped to zero in April, lower even than during summer breaks, those from neighbors and “other relatives” have gone up markedly in the past two months.
Advocates for abused children say there’s another way the pandemic may be hampering reporting 鈥 except in emergencies, social workers are no longer having face-to-face visits with children in foster care, where they might pick up on signs of abuse.
鈥淲e know it鈥檚 happening, just the chances of us catching it go down severely,鈥 said Joe O’Connell, a foster parent and chair of East Hawaii Friends of Foster Families.
The most visible change wrought by the COVID-19 pandemic is reports from schools.
In April 2019, 41 reports came from educational personnel, according to Child Welfare Services data. That month, schools constituted the second biggest source of reports, behind law enforcement.
This April, the number dropped to zero.
Overall, schools are a significant reporter of child abuse, accounting for 460 reports in 2019 and so far in 2020. Only social services, medical and law enforcement personnel reported more.
But it’s not just the number of reported cases 鈥 it’s the quality. Experts say that some of the most reliable reports come from schools.
鈥淥ther people tend to overreact and maybe over-report, but when it comes from the school, it鈥檚 usually from the counselor or someone who has had a long-term relationship with the student,鈥 said O鈥機onnell. 鈥淭he kid鈥檚 actually confiding in somebody that they trust and it tends to be more of an accurate report.鈥
For obvious reasons, it’s routine for school reports to drop off during the summer months, when teachers are not seeing students day in and day out. In July 2019, only three reports came from education personnel, for instance. But the lockdown means students are going longer with no school contact.
“I don鈥檛 know if we鈥檝e ever had zero, even in the summer months,” said Tonia Mahi, an assistant Child Welfare Services Branch administrator at the Hawaii Department of Human Services. “Did people just stop abusing their kids, or you know, what happened? That鈥檚 a significant decrease because we have been trending upward.”
Overall, the number of reports to CWS dropped from 232 last April to 179 reports during April this year.
More Neighbors And Family Members Are Reporting
The coronavirus outbreak also seems to have shifted where reports of abuse and neglect are coming from.
As people locked down at home in March and April, more reports came from the categories of “other relatives” and “friends/neighbors.”
In the same period last year, for instance, four reports came in from friends and neighbors, compared to 19 in March and April this year. Meanwhile, 44 reports this year were registered by “other relatives,” an increase from 29 during the same time last year.
Unemployment in Hawaii has reached a record high, rising from 3% to , the highest in the nation. Studies have shown that the risk of family violence may
CWS has continued to operate amid business shutdowns and physical distancing orders. Social workers suit up in personal protective gear to make in-person visits in response to emergency calls about potential abuse or neglect.
The department recently received an order of 150 face shields and other personal protective gear for employees still working in the field.
In general, to limit contact and avoid the transmission of COVID-19, workers at CWS have been calling ahead to see if anyone in the household is sick.
鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to gather more information virtually before we respond face-to-face,鈥 Mahi added.
DHS spokeswoman Amanda Stevens said reports that pose an immediate safety threat are still investigated in person. It鈥檚 the routine visits when 鈥渢here isn’t any concern for the child鈥 that have gone virtual, she said.
鈥淎ll calls and concerns addressing immediate safety of a child require face-to-face contact,鈥 Stevens said.
But O鈥機onnell says that those routine visits to children in foster care can also detect signs of abuse. Just in East Hawaii, he said, there are as many as two to three reports in foster homes each month.
鈥淚t鈥檚 scary because the rate of abuse at foster homes is higher than the rate of abuse in the general population,鈥 he said. 鈥淯nder normal circumstances, they are going to school every day. This is a dream come true for a predator.鈥
Big Island Family Medicine Resident Physician Dr. Warren Yamashita also worries the shift to virtual meetings makes it harder for caseworkers to detect abuse.
In addition, he’s concerned that the lack of face-to-face meetings means he is not getting information he needs as a doctor from CWS caseworkers.
鈥淎s a family physician who cares for foster youth I’d like the caseworker to be considered the same status of essential worker as myself,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f they are taken out of commission it really affects my ability to care for the patient.鈥
Sign up for our FREE morning newsletter and face each day more informed.
Support Independent, Unbiased News
Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.
About the Author
-
Eleni Avenda帽o, who covers public health issues, is a corps member with , a national nonprofit organization that places journalists in local newsrooms. Her health care coverage is also supported by , , and . You can reach her by email at egill@civilbeat.org or follow her on Twitter at .