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3'1 Plymouth making it happen

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Title: 3'1 Plymouth making it happen


1
3.1 Plymouth - making it happen
2
Plymouth - Making it happen
  • The perspective from some children and young
    people provider services
  • and
  • the key community based adult treatment service
    provider

3
The Bulls Eye Model Parents in treatment
Yellow - Assess, Support, Prevent - Drug Service
Lead (1100 -2200 parents) Blue - Enhanced Support
to Parent and Child(ren) Joint Work (110-220
parents or between 15 of those in
treatment) Green - Full Child Protection led by
Childrens Services (55-110 parents or between
3-5 of those in treatment)
Children Centres
Childrens Social Care
FIP
Parenting Programmes
4
Making it happen
  • Joint outcomes agreed by Safeguarding Board
    covering Adult Treatment Service and Children and
    Young Peoples Services
  • Reduction in the number of looked after children
    where parental substance misuse is significantly
    implicated
  • Reduction in the number of children with a child
    protection plan where parental substance misuse
    is significantly implicated
  • Support children, in families where parental
    substance misuse is a factor, in achieving
    improvements across all 5 Every Child Matters
    outcomes
  • Support families to stay together safely
  • Improvement in parenting skills and capacity in
    substance misusing parents
  • Very similar to DCSF / NTA protocol

5
Plymouth Childrens Social Care
  • Lindsey Parker
  • Cathy Lewis

6
Aims of work
  • Support outcomes agreed by Safeguarding Board
    previous slide (Hidden Harm Strategy)
  • Following a multi-agency Safeguarding Register
    Review key areas for action required the
    following to be achieved.
  • Agencies to monitor engagement of staff in
    Child Protection Conferences and Core Groups
  • Agencies providing reports supporting child
    protection processes should be a good standard
    and must identify the impact on the child of
    parental issues
  • Staff need to be competent around child
    protection and safeguarding
  • The organisation must ensure management
    accountability over achieving these to ensure
    quality and consistency

7
  • What has been achieved so far?
  •  
  • Development of the use of a lead/coordinator role
    for safeguarding within the treatment services
  • Hidden Harm training written and delivered as a
    collaboration between the adult treatment service
    and Plymouth Safeguarding Children board
  • DVD Hidden Harm Lonely developed in Plymouth
    provides a powerful tool as part of training and
    induction to focus the practitioners work to
    include the views of Children and Young People
  • Analysis of the Halo system to ensure
    information regarding status of Children and
    Parents can be consistently captured/identified
  • Improved information sharing systems within and
    between agencies
  • Increased use of CAF by adult treatment staff

8
  • Families with a Child Protection Plan have prompt
    access to specialist substance misuse treatment
  • Childrens Social Care identify two Child
    Protection Officers to work with Treatment
    Service to jointly produce new policies,
    procedures and bespoke training
  • Framework for report writing for Child Protection
    Conference has been devised and is being used
  • Bespoke training package written for all
    operational staff in Substance Misuse Services,
    to increase their knowledge and confidence
    supporting achievement of all aims (In-House)
  • Childrens Social Care can evidence increase in
    attendance at CP meetings and improvement in
    report writing
  • Increased collaboration and improved and shared
    understanding of what blockages exist and what
    needs to be done to support effective CP process
  •  

9
  • Learning

Huge willingness to think family - a spirit of
wanting to engage exists between the services /
staff and commissioners DAAT and Childrens
Trust Developing a shared understanding of the
pressures both the treatment sector and
childrens social care are under to maximise
collaboration We have recognised the need for
innovative roles and thinking to support capacity
and capabilty challenges e.g. a childrens social
worker being seconded into the treatment service
being considered, joint meetings to be encouraged
and co-location to be an aspiration
10
  • Though direction of travel has been agreed the
    speed of implementation needs to more fully take
    account of challenges linked to significant
    culture change, capacity issues and meeting
    targets for the treatment service
  • We successfully worked through an action plan to
    achieve the recommendations from the safeguarding
    register review. We have quickly learnt the need
    to have a joint project team to oversee
    development and delivery of a new plan to drive
    forward implementation.
  • The learning and acknowledgment of the issue has
    opened up debate at ALL levels within the
    agencies.

11
Plymouth Childrens Centres
Pat Smith
12
Aims of work
  • To link parents in treatment with Children Under
    3 to Children Centres initially through a pilot
  • Develop evidence base for delivery and planning
  • Support outcomes agreed by Safeguarding Board
    noted on previous slide (Hidden Harm Strategy)

13
What has been achieved so far?
  • Agreement of Treatment Service to hold CC
    (Children Centres) database to identify CC
    options
  • Each CC in City offering to be part of project
    (good commitment from CCs)
  • Agreement of measures alongside outcomes agreed,
    that include
  • Number of referrals to Childrens Centre
  • Number leading to first contact with Childrens
    Centre
  • Number of children involved in each referral
  • Number of Families staying in touch after their
    first contact

14
  • Agreed Process
  • Senior Managers to introduce pilot to front line
    staff
  • Staff completing Comprehensive Assessments to
    discuss with parents the opportunity to be
    referred to their nearest CC
  • Information packs for all service users to
    contain details of how to access CCs.
  • Substance Misuse worker to contact CC Outreach
    worker to discuss best way to do assessment
  • SM worker to attend assessment/meeting if this
    will help engagement.
  • Support offered to family from CC
  • Substance Misuse work continues.

15
Learning
  • Primarily learning so far is centred on
    treatment services preparation to link with CCs
  • Many workers who have been used to working with
    adults demonstrate little knowledge of the range
    of services for families and children
  • Identifying blockages in abilities to elicit
    information prompting decision to offer referral
    to CCs.
  • Acknowledging the cultural shift in treatment
    staff asking questions linked to children and
    parenting and the importance of management
    support in doing so

16
  • Raising the profile of the importance of locally
    based resources for those with children
  • Supporting the awareness amongst treatment staff
    of the risk of very poor outcomes for very young
    children who are in families where there is
    substance misuse
  • Need for commissioners to be clear about resource
    / capacity issues for the treatment service to
    develop these links
  • Children Centres identifying possible capacity
    issues depending on success of pilot

17
PlymouthFamily Intervention Project
  • Tracy Green

18
Aims of work
  • Clear project outcome of reducing levels of
    problematic substance use in all families
    targeted
  • Support outcomes agreed by Safeguarding Board
    noted on previous slide (Hidden Harm Strategy)
  • Young peoples service to receive more referrals
    for younger children.
  • Increase numbers of problematic substance users
    engaged with treatment services.
  • Increase numbers of those at risk of developing
    problematic use receiving substance use
    interventions.
  • Reduce harm being caused by substance misuse.

19
  • To provide a different model of drugs work from
    the established treatment services. More
    intensive, more inclusive of whole family but has
    to work alongside the other services to
    compliment and enable their provision.
  • To develop referrals for Tier 4 with built in
    support at home for children, grandparents and
    other carers. This means that there could be
    better outcomes for detox/ stabilisation of
    parents who are the service users/ FIP families.
  • To increase the FIP teams ability/confidence to
    address substance misuse with all families.

20
What has been achieved so far?
  • Plymouth FIPs whole family assessment
    incorporates assessing the risk of substance use
  • Decision to appoint specialist worker for
    Substance Misuse employed by treatment service
    and deployed within FIP!
  • Role Profile developed Covering the key worker
    role, alongside offering specialist provision to
    other FIP families and consultancy to other
    mainstream key workers, with the aim of reducing
    the harm caused by substance misuse to users
    themselves, affected others and to the wider
    community.
  • Successful appointment of a substance misuse
    specialist who has seven years experience within
    the treatment service covering areas such as
    working with young people, drug education within
    Schools, young adults using alcohol and sexual
    health.

21
Learning
  • From external evaluation of year 1 of Plymouth
    FIP it was identified that 69 of all families
    had substance misuse problem
  • 54 of families had at least one adult problem
    user
  • 39 of families had at least one 12-18 year old
    problem user
  • Given wide range of treatment service teams /
    services it made sense to provide link through a
    dedicated FIP specialist substance misuse role
  • Determined that it would be most effective for
    the specialist worker would to be employed and
    recruited by Harbour (Specialist Treatment
    Service). This would place the worker within the
    governance and policy framework of the Substance
    Misuse Service and enable them to continue their
    professional development within their lead
    agency.

22
PlymouthParenting Programmes
  • Strengthening Families Programme

23
Aims of work
  • The SFP 10-14 (UK) is a 7 session programme
    focusing on reducing family related risk factors
    for adolescent children and their
    parent/caregivers
  • Help parents/caregivers learn nurturing skills
    that support their children and how to
    effectively discipline and guide their youth
  • Give young people a healthy future orientation
    and an increased appreciation of their
    parent/caregivers. Teaching young people skills
    for dealing with stress and peer pressure
  • Families have fun in activities and games,
    discuss what makes a family strong and solve
    problems together
  • Support outcomes agreed by Safeguarding Board
    noted on previous slide (Hidden Harm Strategy)

24
  • Target Groups are families where primary concern
    is one or more of the following risk factors
    Domestic Violence, Substance Misuse, Mental
    Health and Neglect
  • Overseen by a Children's Trust mandatory board
    for delivery of parenting programmes

25
What has been achieved so far?
  • Spring 2007 a bid was put in through the Home
    Offices Respect Agenda for Parenting Programmes
  • Recruited families from the Target Groups where
    primary concern is one or more of the following
    risk factors Domestic Violence, Substance
    Misuse, Mental Health and Neglect
  • 84 Facilitators now trained from both statutory
    and voluntary services
  • 4 Trainer Facilitators qualified to deliver SFP
    training staff and volunteers across the City
  • 08/09 Thirty-one families successfully completed
    the programme
  • Spring and Summer programmes Thirty-four families
    completed
  • Twenty-six had 1 or more of the targeted issues

26
  • 4 with Domestic Violence, 5 with Substance
    Misuse, 1 with Mental Health, 19 Neglect/poor
    family function and 11 Anti-Social Behaviour
  • Referral of families is done through existing
    services using a nomination criteria
  • Full-time programme coordinator employed

27
Learning
  • Collaborative advantage (multi-agency delivery)
  • A broad spectrum of referrals
  • Maximizing engagement by preparing families
  • Provision of transport
  • Appropriate venues
  • Childcare provision
  • Refreshments
  • Follow-up calls
  • Dedicated, committed passionate staff
  • Meeting the needs of the individuals who attend
  • Monitoring, feedback and evaluation forms
  • Having fun
  • Substance misusing families

28
  • Treatment services can refer in now but capacity
    issues for treatment service places on the
    programmes have not been agreed clarity on this
    will help manage expectations of use of programme
  • We are not sure that there should just be
    substance misusing family programmes
  • Nomination forms not always reflecting the
    families
  • Multi-agency working, different values, codes of
    practice etc.

29
Thank You If you have any queries or questions
please complete the forms handed out and we will
endeavour to respond to you over the next few
weeks. Alternatively email dave.schwartz_at_plymou
th.gov.uk
Children Centres
Childrens Social Care
FIP
Parenting Programmes
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