Identifying and Assessing Neglect

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Identifying and Assessing Neglect

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Identifying and Assessing Neglect Patrick Ayre Department of Applied Social Studies University of Bedfordshire Park Square, Luton email: pga_at_patrickayre.co.uk – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Identifying and Assessing Neglect


1
Identifying and Assessing Neglect
  • Patrick Ayre
  • Department of Applied Social Studies
  • University of Bedfordshire
  • Park Square, Luton
  • email pga_at_patrickayre.co.uk
  • Presentation can be downloaded from
  • http//patrickayre.co.uk/Presentationd.htm

2
  • NEGLECT
  • Parents who neglect their children basically just
    dont know any better because of their own poor
    upbringings. If we send them to a family centre
    for Parental Skills training, all will be well.

3
  • NEGLECT
  • Parents who neglect their children basically just
    dont know any better because of their own poor
    upbringings. If we send them to a family centre
    for Parental Skills training, all will be well.
  • IF ONLY!!....

4
  • NEGLECT
  • So neglected children who come into care may be a
    bit thin, a bit dirty, badly in need of seeing a
    doctor or dentist, maybe a bit wild.
  • But we can place them with foster carers for a
    bit of looking after, a bit of TLC, a bit of
    structure and everything will be fine. The
    children will absolutely love it and will
    immediately start to thrive. Simple really!

5
  • NEGLECT
  • So neglected children who come into care may be a
    bit thin, a bit dirty, badly in need of seeing a
    doctor or dentist, maybe a bit wild.
  • But we can place them with foster carers for a
    bit of looking after, a bit of TLC, a bit of
    structure and everything will be fine. The
    children will absolutely love it and will
    immediately start to thrive. Simple really!
  • IF ONLY!!....

6
Brain development
  • By the age of 3, a babys brain has reached
    almost 90 percent of its adult size.
  • The growth in each region of the brain largely
    depends on receiving stimulation.
  • This stimulation provides the foundation for
    learning.

7
Experience Affects the Structure of the Brain
  • Brain development is activity-dependent
  • Every experience excites some neural circuits and
    leaves others alone
  • Neural circuits used over and over strengthen,
    those that are not used are dropped resulting in
    pruning

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Poor integration of hemispheres and
underdevelopment of the orbitofrontal cortex
  • Difficulty regulating emotion,
  • Lack of cause-effect thinking,
  • Inability to recognize emotions in others,
  • Inability to articulate own emotions,
  • Incoherent sense of self and autobiographical
    history
  • Lack of conscience.

12
Other physiological issues
  • Serotonin emotional stability and feeling good
  • Malnutrition cognitive and motor delays,
    anxiety, depression, social problems, and
    attention problems
  • Myelination
  • Sensitive periods (infancy attachment)

13
Emotional development
  • Sensitive period for emotional development up to
    18 months
  • Shaped primarily by the way in which the prime
    carer interacts with the child
  • Emotional deficits harder to overcome once the
    sensitive window has passed.
  • How often do we intervene assertively at this
    point?

14
Building a child
  • Building a child is like building a house, each
    new level built on the one below. If the lower
    levels are unsound, no amount of tinkering with
    the upper floors will make it stable.

15
Capturing chronic abuse
  • Single events often only significant in context
  • Can often only understand present by setting in
    context of past
  • Intangible Difficult to capture and compare
  • High threshold for recognition
  • Neglect is a pattern not an event

16
The pattern of neglect atypical
17
The pattern of neglect
18
The pattern of neglect
19
The pattern of neglect
20
The pattern of neglect
21
Cumulativeness
22
Failure of cumulativeness
23
Whats the problem?
  • Chronic abuse and the principle of cumulativeness
  • Files very long and badly structured
  • Patterns missed and chronic abuse overlooked
  • The problem of proportionality
  • Acclimatisation (case, agency and geographical)

24
Why do parents neglect?
  • We need to understand the interaction between
  • 3 Ns Nurture, Nature, Now
  • Circumstantial factors and fundamental factors

25
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

26
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

27
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

28
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

29
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

30
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

31
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

32
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

33
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

34
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)

35
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

36
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

37
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

38
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

39
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

40
The assessment of neglect
  • An approach based on the Graded Care Profile by
    Dr OP Shrivastava
  • GCP provides
  • Framework for making assessment
  • Baseline measurement
  • An element of objectivity
  • Judgement about care
  • Reliable standardised evidence
  • http//www.lutonlscb.org/index.php?optioncom_cont
    entviewarticleid183Itemid52

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

42
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

43
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
44
What to observe
Nutrition Housing Clothing Hygiene Health
Quality, Quantity, Preparation, Organisation,
A. PHYSICAL B. SAFETY C. LOVE D. ESTEEM
45
Grades of Care
Grade 1 Grade 2 Grade 3 Grade 4 Grade 5
Level of care All childs needs met Essential needs fully met Some essential needs met Most essential needs unmet Essential needs entirely unmet/hostile
Commitment to care Child first Child priority Child/carer at par Child second Child not considered
Quality of care Best Adequate Equivocal Poor Worst
46
Example AREA C LOVE
Sub-areas 1 2 3 4 5
1. Carer
A Sensitivity Anticipates or picks up very subtle signals- verbal or nonverbal expression or mood. Comprehends clear signals distinct verbal or clear nonverbal expression. Not sensitive enough stimuli and signals have to be intense to make an impact e.g. cry. Quite insensitive needs repeated or prolonged intense signals. Insensitive to even sustained intense signals or aversive.
B Response Synchronisation Timing Responses well synchronised with signals or even before in anticipation Responses mostly synchronised except when occupied by essential chores. Not synchronised for own recreational engagement synchronised if fully unoccupied or child in distress. Even when child in distress responses delayed. No responses unless a clear mishap for fear of incrimination.
C Reciprocation (quality) Responses complementary to the signal. Both emotionally and materially, can get over stressed by distress signals from child. Warm. Material responses (treats etc.) lacking, but emotional responses warm and reassuring. Emotional reciprocation warm if in good mood (not burdened by strictly personal problem), otherwise flat. Emotional reciprocation brisk, flat and functional, annoyance if child in moderate distress but attentive if in severe distress. Aversive/punitive even if child in distress, acts after a serious mishap mainly to avoid incrimination, any warmth/remorse deceptive.
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Sub-Area Scores Scores Scores Scores Scores Area Score Comments
(A) Physical 1. NUTRITION 1 2 3 4 5
(A) Physical 2. HOUSING 1 2 3 4 5
(A) Physical 3. CLOTHING 1 2 3 4 5
(A) Physical 4. HYGIENE 1 2 3 4 5
(A) Physical 5. HEALTH 1 2 3 4 5
(B) Safety 1. IN CARERS PRESENCE 1 2 3 4 5
(B) Safety 2. IN CARERS ABSENCE 1 2 3 4 5
(C) Love 1. CARER 1 2 3 4 5
(C) Love 2. MUTUAL ENGAGEMENT 1 2 3 4 5
(D) Esteem 1. STIMULATION 1 2 3 4 5
(D) Esteem 2. APPROVAL 1 2 3 4 5
(D) Esteem 3. DISAPPROVAL 1 2 3 4 5
(D) Esteem 4. ACCEPTANCE 1 2 3 4 5
48
Targeting Items of Care
Targeted Areas Current Score Target Score Timescale Reviewed Score
1
2
3
4
5
49
Making an assessment
  • Guidance provided (follow up scores of 4 or 5)
  • Evaluates strengths as well as weaknesses
  • Allows progress to be assessed
  • A relatively objective measure
  • Allows help to be targeted where needed

50
Making an assessment
  • 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

51
  Scale for Assessing Neglectful Parenting
(Northamptonshire)
  • 179 individual questions under the following
    headings
  • Food and Eating Habits
  • Health and Hygiene
  • Warmth/Clothing
  • Safety and Supervision
  • Emotional Needs
  • Cognitive Development
  • Educational Needs
  • http//northamptonshirescb.proceduresonline.com/ch
    apters/p_lscbn_neg.html

52
  Example questions (Health and Hygiene)
21 The home lacks showering or bathing facilities
which work, and are available for maintaining
personal hygiene   22 The bath and basin are
dirty, or inaccessible 23 The family lacks a
toilet which works   24The toilet is regularly
left dirty or stained 25 Toddlers potties are
left unemptied containing urine and faeces   26
The kitchen is dirty (eg cooker ingrained with
old food, grime on walls, floor, kitchen
utensils, sink)
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  Making an assessment
  • Each statement scored 1, 2 or 3 according to how
    true it is.
  • Blank spaces for Summary, Conclusions and Action
    Plan
  • Lengthy and comprehensive list of relevant
    factors
  • No guidance on making overall judgments
  • Statements all identify weaknesses
  • Allocation of questions to headings a little
    eccentric at times

54
The chain of reasoning
  • Facts
  • ?
  • Analysis/summary
  • ?
  • Conclusions/recommendations/action

55
The chain of recording
  • What happened/what you saw
  • ?
  • What this means
  • ?
  • What you did/what should be done (and why, if
    this is not clear from the above)

56
The chain of recording
  • But how do you know which facts?
  • Must be informed by a basic risk assessment
    (would not always be spelled out on paper)

57
Risk assessment
  • The dangers involved (that is the feared
    outcomes)
  • The hazards and strengths of the situation (that
    is the factors making it more or less likely that
    the dangers will realised)
  • The probability of a dangerous outcome in this
    case (bearing in mind the strengths and hazards)
  • The further information required to enable this
    to be judged accurately and
  • The methods by which the likelihood of the feared
    outcomes could be diminished or removed.

58
Bias and Balance
  • Include information favourable to the other
    side as well as that favourable to yours
  • It is your job to make judgements but
  • avoid empty evaluative words like inappropriate,
    worrying, inadequate
  • Give evidence for descriptive words like cold,
    dirty and untidy
  • Beware the danger of facts

59
Bias and Balance
  • Born in 1942, he was sentenced to 5 years
    imprisonment at the age of 25. After 5
    unsuccessful fights, he gave up his attempt to
    make a career in boxing in 1981 and has since had
    no other regular employment

60
Lies, damned lies and killer bread
  • Research on bread indicates that
  • More than 98 percent of convicted felons are
    bread users.
  • Half of all children who grow up in
    bread-consuming households score below average on
    standardized tests.
  • More than 90 percent of violent crimes are
    committed within 24 hours of eating bread.
  • Primitive tribal societies that have no bread
    exhibit a low incidence of cancer, Alzheimer's,
    Parkinson's disease, and osteoporosis.
  • In the 18th century, when much more bread was
    eaten, the average life expectancy was less than
    50 years infant mortality rates were
    unacceptably high many women died in childbirth
    and diseases such as typhoid, yellow fever, and
    influenza were common.

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Incomplete or out of date
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Can you trust a snapshot?
64
Assessment Pitfalls
  • Parents behaviour, whether co-operative or
    uncooperative, often misinterpreted
  • Information from family friends and neighbours
    undervalued
  • Coping with aggressive or frightening families
  • Failure to give sufficient weight to relevant
    case history Start again syndrome
  • Not enough attention is paid to what children
    say, how they look and how they behave
    maintenance of a wholly child-centred approach

65
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)

66
Information handling pitfalls
  • Picking out the important from a mass of data
  • Facts recorded faithfully but not always
    critically appraised
  • Too trusting/insufficiently critical
  • Decoyed by another problem
  • False certainty undue faith in a known fact
  • Discarding information which does not fit the
    model we have formed
  • Department of Health (1991) Child abuse A study
    of inquiry reports, 1980-1989, HMSO, London

67
Assessment pitfalls
  • Rule of optimism
  • Natural love
  • Cultural relativism
  • Too much
  • not enough

68
Information handling pitfalls
  • Keeping your head down
  • Hesitancy to challenge other professionals or the
    conventional wisdom
  • Tendency to move from facts to actions without
    showing your working

69
But what is analysis?
  • You have gathered lots of information but now
    what?
  • All you need to do is ask yourself my favourite
    question
  • So what?
  • You have collected all this data, but what does
    this mean, for the service user, for the family
    and for my setting?

70
Conclusions and recommendations
  • Summarise the main issues and the conclusions to
    be drawn from them. (The facts do not necessarily
    speak for themselves it is your job to speak for
    them.)
  • Define objectives as well as actions
  • Draw conclusions from the facts and
    recommendations from the conclusions
  • Explain how you arrived at your conclusions (Have
    you demonstrated the factual/theoretical basis
    for each?)
  • Consider and discuss alternative possibilities

71
Conclusions and recommendations
  • In drawing conclusions be aware of the extent and
    limitations of your own expertise.
  • Conclusions may be supported by research (Dont
    go outside expertise be careful with new or
    controversial theories be aware of counter
    arguments)
  • Your recommendation should usually be specific
    (not either/or)
  • Remember conclusions may be attacked in only two
    ways
  • founded on incorrect information
  • based on incorrect principles of social work

72
Conclusions and recommendations
  • Problems
  • Unsupported assertions or judgements
  • Inability or unwillingness to analyse and draw
    conclusions
  • Failure to answer the key question So what?

73
Reaching a decision
  • Often a decision is made first and the thinking
    done later (Thiele, 2006)
  • As humans, we resort to simplifications, short
    cuts and quick fixes!
  • We reframe, interpret selectively and
    reinterpret.
  • We deny, discount and minimise
  • We exaggerate information especially if vivid,
    unusual, recent or emotionally laden and
  • We avoid, forget and lose information

74
Good Assessments
  • Are clear about the purpose, legal status and
    potential outcomes
  • Are based on a clear theoretical framework
  • Are clear about context and value base
  • Are collaborative and promote accessibility for
    service users
  • Are based on multiple sources of information
  • Value the expertise and understanding service
    users bring to their situation
  • Are clear about missing information

75
Good Assessments
  • Identify themes and patterns about needs, risks,
    protective factors and strengths
  • Generate and test different ways of understanding
    the situation
  • Give meaning to themes, using knowledge based on
    experience/research
  • Lead to an evidence-based conclusion
  • Use supervision to assist reflection, hypotheses
    and objectivity
  • Are able to record and explain outcomes
  • Are reviewed, updated amended in light of new
    information

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Spotting the bad onesOrganisational Clues
  • Mythology exists about the family this family
    is/always/behaves like
  • Negative stereotypes about other agencies exist
    so their information is discounted
  • Sudden changes about view of risk not explained
  • Sudden changes of plan not rationally explained

77
Worker clues
  • Gut feelings says something is wrong
  • Worker does not ask difficult questions
  • Analysis does not account for facts/history
  • Proposed plan does not address issues raised in
    assessment
  • Practitioner is working much harder than the
    parents to explain significant concerns
  • The childs story is missing

78
Inter-Agency Clues
  • Agencies have conflicting views of the
    family/risk
  • Agencies have strong views but offer
    ambiguous/limited evidence
  • Some agencies unwilling to share information
  • Pressure to agree suppresses permission to
    question / inter-agency acclimatisation

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Family Clues
  • Parental intentions not supported by actions
  • Parental optimism involves denial of difficulties
  • Children's accounts conflict with parents
  • Parents talk about their child is
    contradictory/lacks coherence
  • Co-operation is only on the parents terms

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A final thought
  • We are guilty of many errors and many faults
    but the worst of our crimes is abandoning our
    children, neglecting the fountain of life. Many
    of the things we need can wait. The child cannot.
    Right now is the time his bones are being formed,
    his blood is being made, and his senses are being
    developed. To him we cannot answer 'Tomorrow.'
    His name is 'Today.'
  • Gabriela Mistral (Chilean poet, 1889-1957)
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