Avoidable mortality among parents whose children were placed in care in Sweden: A retrospective matched cohort study

Introduction Separation from one’s child can have significant consequences for parental health and well-being. Objectives and Approach We aimed to investigate whether parents whose children were placed in care had higher rates of avoidable (amenable and preventable) mortality. Data were obtained...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Elizabeth Wall-Wieler, Bo Vinnerljung, Can Liu, Leslie Roos, Anders Hjern
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Swansea University 2018-08-01
Series:International Journal of Population Data Science
Online Access:https://ijpds.org/article/view/607
id doaj-fadb270a4317427b8640bd01d7f6f6b0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fadb270a4317427b8640bd01d7f6f6b02020-11-24T21:49:05ZengSwansea UniversityInternational Journal of Population Data Science2399-49082018-08-013410.23889/ijpds.v3i4.607Avoidable mortality among parents whose children were placed in care in Sweden: A retrospective matched cohort studyElizabeth Wall-Wieler0Bo Vinnerljung1Can Liu2Leslie Roos3Anders Hjern4University of ManitobaStockholm UniversityKarolinska InstitutetUniversity of ManitobaStockholm University Introduction Separation from one’s child can have significant consequences for parental health and well-being. Objectives and Approach We aimed to investigate whether parents whose children were placed in care had higher rates of avoidable (amenable and preventable) mortality. Data were obtained from the Swedish national registers. Mortality rates among parents whose children were placed in care between 1990 and 2012 (17 505 mothers, 18 286 fathers) were compared with a 5:1 matched cohort of parents whose children were not placed. We computed rate differences and hazard ratios of all-cause and avoidable mortality. Results When compared with parents who did not have a child placed in care, there were an additional 21 avoidable deaths per 10 000-person years among mothers and an additional 27 avoidable deaths per 10 000-person years among fathers whose children were placed in care. Among mothers, death due to preventable causes were 3·83 times greater (95% CI 2·82-5·21) and deaths due to amenable causes were 3·12 times greater (95% CI 2·07-4·69) for those whose children were placed in care. Among fathers, death due to preventable causes was 1·75 times greater (95% CI 1·41-2·16) and deaths due to amenable causes were 1·52 times greater (95% CI 1·08- 2·13) for those whose children were placed in care. Avoidable mortality rates were higher among mothers whose children were young when placed in care and parents whose children were all placed in care. Conclusion/Implications Mothers who had a young child placed and parents whose children were all placed in care are at much higher risk of avoidable mortality than parents whose children were not placed in care. Targeted public health interventions and more attentive health care could reduce risk of avoidable mortality in this group of parents. https://ijpds.org/article/view/607
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elizabeth Wall-Wieler
Bo Vinnerljung
Can Liu
Leslie Roos
Anders Hjern
spellingShingle Elizabeth Wall-Wieler
Bo Vinnerljung
Can Liu
Leslie Roos
Anders Hjern
Avoidable mortality among parents whose children were placed in care in Sweden: A retrospective matched cohort study
International Journal of Population Data Science
author_facet Elizabeth Wall-Wieler
Bo Vinnerljung
Can Liu
Leslie Roos
Anders Hjern
author_sort Elizabeth Wall-Wieler
title Avoidable mortality among parents whose children were placed in care in Sweden: A retrospective matched cohort study
title_short Avoidable mortality among parents whose children were placed in care in Sweden: A retrospective matched cohort study
title_full Avoidable mortality among parents whose children were placed in care in Sweden: A retrospective matched cohort study
title_fullStr Avoidable mortality among parents whose children were placed in care in Sweden: A retrospective matched cohort study
title_full_unstemmed Avoidable mortality among parents whose children were placed in care in Sweden: A retrospective matched cohort study
title_sort avoidable mortality among parents whose children were placed in care in sweden: a retrospective matched cohort study
publisher Swansea University
series International Journal of Population Data Science
issn 2399-4908
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Introduction Separation from one’s child can have significant consequences for parental health and well-being. Objectives and Approach We aimed to investigate whether parents whose children were placed in care had higher rates of avoidable (amenable and preventable) mortality. Data were obtained from the Swedish national registers. Mortality rates among parents whose children were placed in care between 1990 and 2012 (17 505 mothers, 18 286 fathers) were compared with a 5:1 matched cohort of parents whose children were not placed. We computed rate differences and hazard ratios of all-cause and avoidable mortality. Results When compared with parents who did not have a child placed in care, there were an additional 21 avoidable deaths per 10 000-person years among mothers and an additional 27 avoidable deaths per 10 000-person years among fathers whose children were placed in care. Among mothers, death due to preventable causes were 3·83 times greater (95% CI 2·82-5·21) and deaths due to amenable causes were 3·12 times greater (95% CI 2·07-4·69) for those whose children were placed in care. Among fathers, death due to preventable causes was 1·75 times greater (95% CI 1·41-2·16) and deaths due to amenable causes were 1·52 times greater (95% CI 1·08- 2·13) for those whose children were placed in care. Avoidable mortality rates were higher among mothers whose children were young when placed in care and parents whose children were all placed in care. Conclusion/Implications Mothers who had a young child placed and parents whose children were all placed in care are at much higher risk of avoidable mortality than parents whose children were not placed in care. Targeted public health interventions and more attentive health care could reduce risk of avoidable mortality in this group of parents.
url https://ijpds.org/article/view/607
work_keys_str_mv AT elizabethwallwieler avoidablemortalityamongparentswhosechildrenwereplacedincareinswedenaretrospectivematchedcohortstudy
AT bovinnerljung avoidablemortalityamongparentswhosechildrenwereplacedincareinswedenaretrospectivematchedcohortstudy
AT canliu avoidablemortalityamongparentswhosechildrenwereplacedincareinswedenaretrospectivematchedcohortstudy
AT leslieroos avoidablemortalityamongparentswhosechildrenwereplacedincareinswedenaretrospectivematchedcohortstudy
AT andershjern avoidablemortalityamongparentswhosechildrenwereplacedincareinswedenaretrospectivematchedcohortstudy
_version_ 1725889688068161536