%0 Journal Article %T An International Effort to Develop a Fidelity Measure for Signs of Safety£¿ %A Andrew Turnell %A Kim Pearson %A Michael Caslor %A Peter J. Pecora %A Yvonne Humenay Roberts %J Research on Social Work Practice %@ 1552-7581 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/1049731518754724 %X This article describes how a worker fidelity assessment measure was developed for Signs of Safety£¿¡ªan approach to assessing safety and risk in child protective services that is being implemented in the United States and over 11 other countries. We applied the Delphi Survey process with 70 experts from nine countries to identify key practice elements that could be assessed by supervisors. Then, 435 frontline staff were assessed by 285 supervisors from six countries. Factor analyses of the 28 items yielded four distinct factors. These data were then used to refine the fidelity assessment. The majority of supervisors reported that the assessment helped them to identify worker strengths and areas for refinement within the dimensions of Signs of Safety and overall child protective services practice. The value of developing similar tools for parents and workers was endorsed by the study participants %K child abuse %K child welfare %K instrument development %K risk assessment %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1049731518754724