IOWA STATUTES AND CODES
232.71B - DUTIES OF THE DEPARTMENT UPON RECEIPT OF REPORT.
232.71B DUTIES OF THE DEPARTMENT UPON RECEIPT OF
REPORT.
1. Commencement of assessment -- purpose.
a. If the department determines a report constitutes a child
abuse allegation, the department shall promptly commence an
appropriate assessment within twenty-four hours of receiving the
report.
b. The primary purpose of the assessment shall be the
protection of the child named in the report. The secondary purpose
of the assessment shall be to engage the child's family in services
to enhance family strengths and to address needs.
2. Notification of parents. The department, within five
working days of commencing the assessment, shall provide written
notification of the assessment to the child's parents. If a parent
is alleged to have committed the child abuse, the notice shall inform
the parents regarding the complaint or allegation made regarding the
parent. The parents shall be informed in a manner that protects the
confidentiality rights of an individual who reported the child abuse
or provided information as part of the assessment process. However,
if the department shows the court to the court's satisfaction that
notification is likely to endanger the child or other persons, the
court shall orally direct the department to withhold notification.
Within one working day of issuing an oral directive, the court shall
issue a written order restraining the notification. The department
shall not reveal in the written notification to the parents or
otherwise the identity of the reporter of child abuse to a subject of
a child abuse report listed in section 235A.15, subsection 2,
paragraph "a".
3. Involvement of law enforcement. The department shall
apply protocols, developed with the local child protection assistance
team established pursuant to section 915.35, to prioritize the
actions taken in response to child abuse reports and to work jointly
with child protection assistance teams and law enforcement agencies
in performing assessment and investigative processes for child abuse
reports in which a criminal act harming a child is alleged. The
county attorney and appropriate law enforcement agencies shall also
take any other lawful action which may be necessary or advisable for
the protection of the child. If a report is determined not to
constitute a child abuse allegation, but a criminal act harming a
child is alleged, the department shall immediately refer the matter
to the appropriate law enforcement agency.
4. Assessment process. The assessment is subject to all of
the following:
a. Identification of the nature, extent, and cause of the
injuries, if any, to the child named in the report.
b. Identification of the person or persons responsible for
the alleged child abuse.
c. A description of the name, age, and condition of other
children in the same home as the child named in the report.
d. An evaluation of the home environment. If concerns
regarding protection of children are identified by the child
protection worker, the child protection worker shall evaluate the
child named in the report and any other children in the same home as
the parents or other persons responsible for their care.
e. An interview of the person alleged to have committed the
child abuse, if the person's identity and location are known. The
offer of an interview shall be made to the person prior to any
consideration or determination being made that the person committed
the alleged abuse. The person shall be informed of the complaint or
allegation made regarding the person. The person shall be informed
in a manner that protects the confidentiality rights of the
individual who reported the child abuse or provided information as
part of the assessment process. The purpose of the interview shall
be to provide the person with the opportunity to explain or rebut the
allegations of the child abuse report or other allegations made
during the assessment. The court may waive the requirement to offer
the interview only for good cause. The person offered an interview,
or the person's attorney on the person's behalf, may decline the
offer of an interview of the person.
f. Unless otherwise prohibited under section 234.40 or
280.21, the use of corporal punishment by the person responsible for
the care of a child which does not result in a physical injury to the
child shall not be considered child abuse.
5. Home visit. The assessment may, with the consent of the
parent or guardian, include a visit to the home of the child named in
the report and an interview or observation of the child may be
conducted. If permission to enter the home to interview or observe
the child is refused, the juvenile court or district court upon a
showing of probable cause may authorize the person making the
assessment to enter the home and interview or observe the child.
6. Facility or school visit. The assessment may include a
visit to a facility providing care to the child named in the report
or to any public or private school subject to the authority of the
department of education where the child named in the report is
located. The administrator of a facility, or a public or private
school shall cooperate with the child protection worker by providing
confidential access to the child named in the report for the purpose
of interviewing the child, and shall allow the child protection
worker confidential access to other children for the purpose of
conducting interviews in order to obtain relevant information. The
child protection worker may observe a child named in a report in
accordance with the provisions of section 232.68, subsection 3,
paragraph "b". A witness shall be present during an observation
of a child. Any child aged ten years of age or older can terminate
contact with the child protection worker by stating or indicating the
child's wish to discontinue the contact. The immunity granted by
section 232.73 applies to acts or omissions in good faith of
administrators and their facilities or school districts for
cooperating in an assessment and allowing confidential access to a
child.
7. Information requests.
a. The department may request information from any person
believed to have knowledge of a child abuse case. The county
attorney, any law enforcement or social services agency in the state,
and any mandatory reporter, whether or not the reporter made the
specific child abuse report, shall cooperate and assist in the
assessment upon the request of the department.
b. In performing an assessment, the department may request
criminal history data from the department of public safety on any
person believed to be responsible for an injury to a child which, if
confirmed, would constitute child abuse. The department shall
establish procedures for determining when a criminal history records
check is necessary.
8. Protective disclosure. If the department determines that
disclosure is necessary for the protection of a child, the department
may disclose to a subject of a child abuse report referred to in
section 235A.15, subsection 2, paragraph "a", that an individual
is listed in the child or dependent adult abuse registry or is
required to register with the sex offender registry in accordance
with chapter 692A.
9. Physical examination. If the department refers a child to
a physician for a physical examination, the department shall contact
the physician regarding the examination within twenty-four hours of
making the referral. If the physician who performs the examination
upon referral by the department reasonably believes the child has
been abused, the physician shall report to the department within
twenty-four hours of performing the examination.
10. Multidisciplinary team. In each county or multicounty
area in which more than fifty child abuse reports are made per year,
the department shall establish a multidisciplinary team, as defined
in section 235A.13, subsection 8. Upon the department's request, a
multidisciplinary team shall assist the department in the assessment,
diagnosis, and disposition of a child abuse report.
11. Facility protocol.
a. The department shall apply a protocol, developed in
consultation with facilities providing care to children, for
conducting an assessment of reports of abuse of children allegedly
caused by employees of facilities providing care to children. As
part of such an assessment, the department shall notify the licensing
authority for the facility, the governing body of the facility, and
the administrator in charge of the facility of any of the following:
(1) A violation of facility policy noted in the assessment.
(2) An instance in which facility policy or lack of facility
policy may have contributed to the reported incident of alleged child
abuse.
(3) An instance in which general practice in the facility appears
to differ from the facility's written policy.
b. The licensing authority, the governing body, and the
administrator in charge of the facility shall take any lawful action
which may be necessary or advisable to protect children receiving
care.
12. Assessment report. The department, upon completion of
the assessment, shall make a written report of the assessment, in
accordance with all of the following:
a. The written assessment shall incorporate the information
required by subsection 4.
b. The written assessment shall be completed within twenty
business days of the receipt of the report.
c. The written assessment shall include a description of the
child's condition, identification of the injury or risk to which the
child was exposed, the circumstances which led to the injury or risk
to the child, and the identity of any person alleged to be
responsible for the injury or risk to the child.
d. The written assessment shall identify the strengths and
needs of the child, and of the child's parent, home, and family.
e. The written assessment shall identify services available
from the department and informal and formal services and other
support available in the community to address the strengths and needs
identified in the assessment.
f. Upon completion of the assessment, the department shall
consult with the child's family in offering services to the child and
the child's family to address strengths and needs identified in the
assessment.
g. The department shall notify each subject of the child
abuse report, as identified in section 235A.15, subsection 2,
paragraph "a", of the results of the assessment, of the subject's
right, pursuant to section 235A.19, to correct the report data or
disposition data which refers to the subject, and of the procedures
to correct the data.
h. If after completing the assessment process the child
protection worker determines, with the concurrence of the worker's
supervisor and the department's area administrator, that a report is
a spurious report or that protective concerns are not present, the
portions of the assessment report described under paragraphs "d"
and "e" shall not be required.
13. Court-ordered and voluntary services. The department
shall provide or arrange for and monitor services for abused children
and their families on a voluntary basis or under a final or
intermediate order of the juvenile court.
14. County attorney -- juvenile court. The department shall
provide the juvenile court and the county attorney with a copy of the
portion of the written assessment pertaining to the child abuse
report. The juvenile court and the county attorney shall notify the
department of any action taken concerning an assessment provided by
the department.
15. False reports. If a fourth report is received from the
same person who made three earlier reports which identified the same
child as a victim of child abuse and the same person responsible for
the care of the child as the alleged abuser and which were determined
by the department to be entirely false or without merit, the
department may determine that the report is again false or without
merit due to the report's spurious or frivolous nature and may in its
discretion terminate its assessment of the report. If the department
receives more than three reports which identify the same child as a
victim of child abuse or the same person as the alleged abuser of a
child, or which were made by the same person, and the department
determined the reports to be entirely false or without merit, the
department shall provide information concerning the reports to the
county attorney for consideration of criminal charges under section
232.75, subsection 3. Section History: Recent Form
97 Acts, ch 35, §6, 25; 97 Acts, ch 176, §24, 43; 2001 Acts, ch
122, §5; 2002 Acts, ch 1074, §1; 2003 Acts, ch 44, §50; 2003 Acts, ch
47, §1; 2003 Acts, ch 107, §1; 2003 Acts, ch 123, §1; 2003 Acts, ch
179, §68; 2004 Acts, ch 1152, §1, 2; 2009 Acts, ch 41, §239
Referred to in § 135.43, 232.68, 232.71C, 232.71D, 232.72, 232.73,
232.77, 232.78, 235A.15, 235A.19, 331.653, 915.35 Footnotes
Written assessment made for a child abuse report shall include a
determination as to whether or not substance abuse by the person
responsible for the child's care was a factor in the report and
finding of abuse; joint study by departments of public health and
human services to collect related data and develop and implement a
protocol on or before July 1, 2009, to jointly address child abuse
cases wholly or partially caused by substance abuse; reports due on
or before December 15, 2009, and December 15, 2010; 2008 Acts, ch
1121, § 1