Children’s Reports of Disclosure Recipient Reactions in Forensic Interviews: Comparing the NICHD and MoGP Protocols

被引:15
作者
Ahern E.C. [1 ]
Lamb M.E. [1 ]
机构
[1] University of Cambridge, Cambridge
关键词
Children; Disclosure; Forensic interview;
D O I
10.1007/s11896-016-9205-x
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Reactions from confidantes who receive children’s abuse disclosures can affect children’s well-being and the likelihood that they will recant. Disclosure recipient (DR) reactions were coded in 95 forensic interviews of 4- to 13-year-old alleged sexual abuse victims. Half of the interviews were conducted using the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) Protocol (which includes a disclosure phase focused on the child’s initial abuse report) and the other half using the Memorandum of Good Practice (MoGP), a predecessor of the Achieving Best Evidence (ABE) guidelines used in the UK today (which recommends asking about children’s initial disclosures but has no designated disclosure phase). Children reported a variety of DR reactions, including supportive and unsupportive responses, and noted that many DRs questioned them about the allegations. NICHD interviews contained more references to DR reactions than MoGP interviews. NICHD interviews elicited more DR reaction information using invitations rather than more focused prompts and by asking children explicitly about their disclosures rather than relying on children to provide the information spontaneously. Findings indicated that children may be willing and able to provide disclosure information but may require prompting. © 2016, The Author(s).
引用
收藏
页码:85 / 93
页数:8
相关论文
共 33 条
[1]  
Ahern E.C., Lyon T.D., Supplemental investigative interview questions, Retrieved from:, (2011)
[2]  
Bala N., Mitnick M., Trocme N., Houston C., Sexual abuse allegations and parental separation: smokescreen or fire?, J Fam Stud, 13, pp. 26-56, (2007)
[3]  
Achieving best evidence in criminal proceedings., (2011)
[4]  
Davies G., Marshall E., Robertson N., Child abuse: training investigative officers (police research series, No, 94), (1998)
[5]  
Davis D., Friedman R.D., Memory for conversation: the orphan child of witness memory researchers, Handbook of eyewitness psychology, pp. 3-57, (2007)
[6]  
Elliott A.N., Carnes C.N., Reactions of nonoffending parents to the sexual abuse of their child: a review of the literature, Child Maltreat, 6, pp. 314-331, (2001)
[7]  
Everson M.D., Hunter W.M., Runyon D.K., Edelson G.A., Coulter M.L., Maternal support following disclosure of incest, Am J Orthopsychiatry, 59, pp. 197-207, (1989)
[8]  
Gries L.T., Goh D.S., Andrews M.B., Gilbert J., Praver F., Naierman-Stelzer D., Positive reactions to disclosure and recovery from child sexual abuse, J Child Sex Abus, 9, pp. 29-51, (2000)
[9]  
Goodman G.S., Taub E.P., Jones D.P., England P., Testifying in criminal court: emotional effects on child sexual assault victims, Monograph of the Society for Research on Child Development, (1992)
[10]  
Hershkowitz I., Orbach Y., Lamb M.E., Sternberg K.J., Horowitz D., Dynamics of forensic interviews with suspected abuse victims who do not disclose abuse, Child Abuse Negl, 30, 7, pp. 753-769, (2006)