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Making the Case for Videoconferencing and Remote Child Custody Evaluations (RCCEs)

Making the Case for Videoconferencing and Remote Child Custody Evaluations (RCCEs)

A few newsletters ago I introduced an article relating to defending Daubert challenges to telepsychiatry evaluations.

The subject of telehealth and it’s efficacy continues to be in the forefront of healthcare discussions. In this newsletter I’d like to direct readers to Dr. (and family lawyer) Milfred “Bud” Dale’s writing in a 2021 issues of Psychology, Public Policy and Law is support of using telepsychology in time-sharing (Florida terminology) evaluations(a/k/a “custody evaluations”).

Here is the abstract:

The COVID-19 pandemic and its requirements for social distancing and limited, if any, in-person contact have forced the child custody community to consider remote child custody evaluations (RCCEs) conducted through videoconferencing. CCEs are perhaps the most complex of all forensic evaluations, requiring complex, multifaceted assessments of multiple parties and their relationships in order to address the best interests of the child. 

Attempting these evaluations via videoconferencing should be done carefully and only after consideration of numerous factors, including whether this alternative can be safely and reliably accomplished. This article outlines the conceptual approach used by the child custody community for determining the foci of the evaluation, tailoring data collection via multiple methodologies, and analyzing the data. 

The article reviews the empirical literature demonstrating that professional relationships and various clinical and forensic processes have reliably and successfully used videoconferencing with adults, children, and different clinical and forensic populations. 

The article also outlines how evaluators conducting RCCEs must comply with the ethical demands of their discipline or profession, as well as ethical demands unique to remote service delivery. Finally, the article addresses how evaluators can prepare for challenges to their work that are based upon the standards for admissibility of expert witness testimony. The limitations of videoconferencing, including limitations specific to the demands of RCCEs, are also reviewed.

Read more:Readers who are interested in obtaining the full article from the author can go to Dr. Dale’s web site (SEE: https://www.buddalelaw.com/knowledge-center) or request a copy via a link through Researchgate.com (Go to: Making the Case for Videoconferencing and Remote Child Custody Evaluations (RCCES): The Empirical, Ethical, and Evidentiary Arguments for Accepting New Technology | Request PDF (researchgate.net))

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