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Identifying Neglect: What professionals can do

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Identifying Neglect: What professionals can do Patrick Ayre Department of Applied Social Studies University of Bedfordshire Park Square, Luton email: pga_at_patrickayre ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Identifying Neglect: What professionals can do


1
Identifying Neglect What professionals can do
  • Patrick Ayre
  • Department of Applied Social Studies
  • University of Bedfordshire
  • Park Square, Luton
  • email pga_at_patrickayre.co.uk
  • web http//patrickayre.co.uk

2
A child centred approach
  • The purpose of assessment is to understand what
    it is like to be that child (and what it will be
    like in the future if nothing changes)

3
Why do parents neglect?
  • We need to understand the interaction between
  • 3 Ns Nurture, Nature, Now
  • Circumstantial factors and fundamental factors

4
Why do parents neglect?
  • Circumstantial
  • Poverty
  • Particular relationships
  • Lack of skill/knowledge
  • Temporary illness
  • Lack of support
  • Environmental factors
  • Fundamental
  • Lack of parenting capacity
  • Deep seated attitudinal/behavioural/
    psychological problems
  • Long term health issues
  • Entrenched problematical drug /alcohol use

5
The effects of neglect
  • Howe identifies 4 types of neglect
  • Emotional neglect
  • Disorganised neglect
  • Depressed or passive neglect
  • Severe deprivation
  • Each is associated with different effects and
    implications for intervention

6
Emotional neglect
  • Sins of commission and omission
  • Closure and flight avoid contact, ignore
    advice, miss appointments, deride professionals,
    children unavailable
  • However, may seek help with a child who needs to
    be cured
  • Intervention often delayed

7
Emotional neglect parents
  • Cant cope with childrens demands
    avoid/disengage from child in need dismissive or
    punitive response
  • Six types of response
  • Spurning, rejecting, belittling
  • Terrorising
  • Isolating from positive experiences
  • Exploiting/corrupting
  • Denying emotional responsiveness
  • Failing medical needs

8
Emotional neglect children
  • Frightened, unhappy, anxious, low self-esteem
  • Precocious, streetwise
  • Withdrawn, isolated, aggressive fear intimacy
    and dependence
  • Behaviour increasingly anti-social and
    oppositional
  • Brain development affected difficulties in
    processing and regulating emotional arousal

9
Disorganised neglect
  • Classic problem families
  • Thick case files
  • Can annoy and frustrate but endear and amuse
  • Chaos and disruption
  • Reasoning minimised, affect is dominant
  • Feelings drive behaviour and social interaction

10
Disorganised neglect carers
  • Feelings of being undervalued or emotionally
    deprived in childhood so need to be centre of
    attention/affection
  • Demanding and dependant with respect to
    professionals
  • Crisis is a necessary not a contingent state

11
Disorganised neglect carers
  • Cope with babies (babies need them) but then
  • Parental responses to children unpredictable
    driven by how the parent is feeling, not the
    needs of the child
  • Lack of attunement and synchronicity

12
Disorganised neglect children
  • Anxious and demanding
  • Infants fractious, fretful, clinging, hard to
    soothe
  • Young children attention seeking exaggerated
    affect poor confidence and concentration
    jealous show off go to far
  • Teens immature, impulsive need to be noticed
    leads to trouble at school and in community
  • Neglectful parents feel angry and helpless
    reject the child to grandparents, care or gangs

13
Depressed neglect
  • Classic neglect
  • Material and emotional poverty
  • Homes and children dirty and smelly
  • Urine soaked matresses, dog faeces, filthy
    plates, rags at the windows
  • A sense of hopelessness and despair (can be
    reflected in workers)

14
Depressed neglect carers
  • Often severely abused/neglected own parents
    depressed or sexually or physically abusive
  • May have learning difficulties
  • Passive helplessness response to demands of
    family life
  • Have given up both thinking and feeling

15
Depressed neglect carers
  • Listless and unresponsive to childrens needs and
    demands, limited interaction
  • Lack of pleasure or anger in dealings with
    children and professionals
  • No smacks, no shouting, no deliberate harm but no
    hugs, no warmth, no emotional involvement
  • No structure poor supervision, care and food

16
Depressed neglect children
  • Lack interaction with parents required for mental
    and emotional development
  • Infant Incurious and unresponsive moan and
    whimper but dont cry or laugh
  • At school isolated, aimless, lacking in
    concentration, drive, confidence and self-esteem
    but do not show anti-social behaviour

17
Severe deprivation
  • Eastern European orphanages, parents with serious
    issues of depression, learning disabilities, drug
    addiction, care system at its worst
  • Children left in cot or serial caregiving
  • Combination of severe neglect and absence of
    selective attachment child is essentially alone

18
Severe deprivation children
  • Infants lack pre-attachment behaviours of
    smiling, crying, eye contact
  • Children impulsivity, hyperactivity, attention
    deficits, cognitive impairment and developmental
    delay, aggressive and coercive behaviour, eating
    problems, poor relationships
  • Inhibited withdrawn passive, rarely smile,
    autistic-type behaviour and self-soothing
  • Disinhibited attention-seeking, clingy,
    over-friendly relationships shallow, lack
    reciprocity

19
Capturing chronic abuse
  • Judging the quality of care is an essential
    component of any assessment but how well do we do
    it?
  • Judgements subjective and prone to bias
  • Intangible Difficult to capture and compare
  • High threshold and acclimatisation
  • Neglect is a pattern not an event

20
The pattern of neglect atypical
21
The pattern of neglect typical
22
The pattern of neglect
23
The pattern of neglect
24
The pattern of neglect
25
Cumulativeness
26
Failure of cumulativeness
27
GCP provides
  • Framework for making assessment
  • Baseline measurement
  • An element of objectivity
  • Judgement about care
  • Reliable standardised evidence

28
GCP uses
  • Pre-referral assessments
  • Snapshot assessments
  • Contribution to CAF assessments
  • Contribution to Core Assessment (parenting
    capacity)
  • Self-assessment (parents and carers)
  • Young persons assessment of parenting
  • Tool for setting goals and assessing progress
  • Tool to facilitate discussion

29
GCP users
  • Health visitors
  • School nurses
  • Social workers
  • Family centre workers
  • Education staff

30
Why choose GCP?
  • Child focused
  • User friendly
  • Common language
  • Promotes partnership

31
Why choose GCP?
  • Evaluates strengths as well as weaknesses
  • Allows progress to be assessed
  • A relatively objective measure
  • Allows help to be targeted where needed

32
Domains of Care
Stimulation Approval Disapproval Acceptance
Sensitivity Responsivity Reciprocity Overtures
Self actualisation
Esteem
Love and belongingness
Present absent
Safety
Physical needs
Nutrition. Housing, Clothing, Hygiene Health
Maslow, A. 1954
33
What to observe
Nutrition Housing Clothing Hygiene Health
Quality, Quantity, Preparation, Organisation,
A. PHYSICAL B. SAFETY C. LOVE D. ESTEEM
34
Grades of Care
35
Scoring
  • Rating 1 5
  • Use on every child in the family
  • Use with different carers
  • Complete with the parent/carer
  • Use information, observation, records

36
Scoring
  • Complete individual scores for each sub-area
  • Transpose to the record sheet
  • Agree action, targets and timescales

37
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38
Targeting Items of Care
39
Unique Advantages
  • Common language, common reference
  • Objective measure child focussed
  • Effective tool to promote partnership assessments
    and planning with parents
  • User friendly
  • Comprehensively covers all areas of care
  • Child and carer specific
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