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Messages from Serious Case Reviews

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Title: Child abuse on the front page: Learning lessons from the British experience Author: Patrick Ayre Last modified by: PGAyre Created Date: 9/25/1999 10:07:50 AM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Messages from Serious Case Reviews


1
Messages from Serious Case Reviews
  • 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
Learning from enquiries
  • Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to
    repeat it
  • (George Santayana)

3
Plus ça change
  • Every child matters Keeping children safe
  • Jasmine Beckford, Kimberley Carlile, Tyra Henry
    Victoria Climbié, Lauren Wright and Ainlee
    Walker,
  • Doing the simple things well

4
Serious Case Reviews
  • Held when a child has died or suffered serious
    harm and abuse or neglect suspected
  • Aim to identify lessons to be learned
  • Action plan drawn up

5
Serious Case Reviews
  • A panel of senior managers drawn from key local
    agencies
  • Final report normally written by an experienced
    external consultant
  • Examine management reviews prepared by each
    agency

6
Serious Case Reviews
  • Produce overview report and action plan
  • Executive summary of report becomes a public
    document

7
Learning from Past Experience Major themes from
SCR reviews of the 90s
  • Inter-agency working
  • Limited inter-agency co-operation and service
    integration, especially child and adult services
  • Poor communication both between agencies and
    within agencies
  • Health services and child protection variable
    levels of knowledge, especially among GPs and
    those in adult mental health service

8
Learning from Past Experience
  • Collecting and interpreting information
  • Importance of comprehensive family assessments,
    especially male figures
  • Need for medical evidence to be considered within
    the overall context
  • Receiving, interpreting and dealing with
    referrals
  • Understanding thresholds, especially the
    importance of neglect and emotional deprivation
    and the need to accumulate evidence

9
Capturing chronic abuse
  • Judging the impact of long-term abuse 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 for recognition
  • Neglect is a pattern not an event

10
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 for recognition
  • Neglect is a pattern not an event

11
Our image of assessment
12
The reality of assessment?
13
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 for recognition
  • Neglect is a pattern not an event

14
The pattern of neglect atypical
15
The pattern of neglect typical
16
The pattern of neglect
17
The pattern of neglect
18
The pattern of neglect
19
What we would hope to find
20
What we found
21
What we found
  • Chronic abuse and the principle of cumulativeness
  • Incidents scattered through files
  • The problem of proportionality
  • Acclimatisation

22
Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them
  • Professionals think that when they have explained
    something as clearly as they can, the other
    person will have understood
  • Parents behaviour, whether co-operative or
    uncooperative, is often misinterpreted
  • Not enough weight to information from family
    friends and neighbours
  • Not enough attention is paid to what children
    say, how they look and how they behave
  • Attention is focused on the most visible or
    pressing problems and other warning signs are not
    appreciated
  • When faced with an aggressive or frightening
    family, professionals are reluctant to discuss
    fears for their own safety and ask for help
  • Information taken at the first enquiry is not
    adequately recorded, facts are not checked and
    reasons for decisions are not noted.
  • In Cleaver, H, Wattam, C and Cawson, P Assessing
    Risk in Child Protection, NSPCC, 1998

23
Information handling
  • Picking out the important from a mass of data
  • Interpretation
  • Distinguishing fact/opinion too
    trusting/insufficiently critical
  • Mistrusted source
  • Decoyed by another problem
  • False certainty undue faith in a known fact
  • Discarding information which does not fit
  • First impressions/assumptions
  • Department of Health (1991) Child abuse A study
    of inquiry reports, 1980-1989, HMSO,

24
Learning from Past Experience
  • Decision-making
  • Need for shared decision-making, especially in
    respect of not taking action or case closure
  • Moving from data collection and sharing to
    strategic discussions and clear plans
  • Planning a co-ordinated response across
    professionals and agencies

25
Learning from Past Experience
  • Relations with families
  • Dealing with hostile families or those who
    withdraw
  • Lack of awareness of the impact of domestic
    violence on children and their safety.
  • Seeing the child as the client, focusing on his
    or her protection and not being distracted by
    other problems or by adult or sibling concerns

26
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)

27
Learning from Past Experience (2002)
  • Geographical mobility breaking contact
  • Common understanding of what triggers an
    assessment of need or risk of significant harm?
  • Information sharing and confidentiality
  • Better identification of children vulnerable to
    abuse
  • Understanding the process of change in public
    services

28
ANALYSING CHILD DEATHS AND SERIOUS INJURY THROUGH
ABUSE AND NEGLECT (2003-5)
  • Hard to help young people
  • Hesitancy in challenging
  • Hostile and difficult to engage families
  • Start again syndrome.
  • Very young children physically assaulted known to
    universal services or adult services rather than
    childrens social care
  • Well over half domestic violence, or mental ill
    health, or parental substance misuse

29
Hard to Help The complexity of the challenge
  • Young people may be
  • Victims,
  • Perpetrators
  • Parents
  • Any combination of the above
  • but have the same right to be safeguarded as any
    other child.

30
The background
  • The reviews showed that state care did not
    always support these young people fully and that
    they experienced agency neglect Brandon and
    others (2008).

31
The young people
  • Adolescence marks start of serious problems for
    many children
  • Onset of mental health issues
  • Family conflict
  • Drug use, offending
  • Sexual activity
  • Running away

32
The young people (Brandon and others)
  • History of rejection, loss and, usually, severe
    maltreatment
  • Long term intensive involvement from multiple
    agencies
  • Parents history of abuse and current mental
    health and substance issues
  • Difficult to contain in school
  • Typically self-harming and misusing substances,
    often self-neglect

33
The young people (Brandon and others)
  • Numerous placement breakdowns
  • Running away, going missing
  • Risk of dangerous sexual activity including
    exploitation
  • Sometimes placed in specialist settings, only to
    be withdrawn because of running away

34
The young people (My experience)
  • Long involvement, but not always intense
  • Sometimes few placements, but all wrecked by the
    young person
  • Common factor that local services just did not
    know what to do with them.
  • By the time of the incident, for many of the
    young people, little or help was being offered
    because agencies appeared to have run out of
    helping strategies (Brandon and others, 2008).

35
The response
  • Reluctance to identify mental illness and
    suicidal intent (CAMHS)
  • Failure to respond in a sustained way to extreme
    distress manifested in risky behaviour (sex,
    drugs, suicide attempts)
  • Arguing between agencies about responsibility and
    thresholds
  • Reasons for running not addressed adequately

36
The response
  • Running away leads to discharge
  • More generally, does rejection of services lead
    to total abandonment?
  • Age used as a reason for not imposing services
  • No proper assessment of competence
    allowed/forced to choose
  • Dealing with incidents but failing to recognise
    patterns

37
The obstacles
  • Hard to get a purchase on the system
  • Wrong children, wrong adults (Ayre, 2000)
  • Lack of off-the-shelf resources
  • The limited resources are poorly coordinated and
    integrated
  • Government targets not child centred or child
    driven
  • Different agency agendas and mutual
    misunderstanding falling down the gap

38
The solutions?
  • Biehal (2005) recommends adolescent support teams
    in the community but is that enough?
  • The complexity of the challenge requires flexible
    collaborative, individualised responses built
    around the young person

39
Learning from recent SCRs
  • Information drawn from
  • About 30 Serious Case Reviews and expert witness
    reports undertaken in local authorities around
    England since 2003
  • A review of reviews undertaken for one
    authority

40
Learning from recent SCRs
  • Key areas of concern
  • Assessment practice
  • Response to overload
  • Communication and collaboration
  • Child protection meetings and conferences
  • Case management

41
Assessment Practice
  • Great disquiet over assessment practice
  • Failure to give sufficient weight to relevant
    case history
  • Facts recorded faithfully but not always
    critically appraised
  • Guidance and thresholds

42
Assessment Practice
  • Use of trained staff
  • Assessment of male carers
  • Maintenance of a wholly child-centred approach
  • Formal assessment of risk (How do you do a risk
    assessment?)

43
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.

44
Response to overload
  • Acclimatisation at individual and agency levels
  • Lack of a strategic multi-agency response

45
The Child Safeguarding System (nominal)
46
The Child Safeguarding System (actual?)
47
Collaboration and communication
  • Communication generally found to be good but
  • Communication with hospitals
  • Referrals
  • Medical reports
  • Mental health or drugs issues

48
Mental health or drugs issues
  • Working on the same case but not working jointly
  • Mutual incomprehension and misunderstanding
  • False expectations and assumptions
  • Abdicating responsibility
  • Need for interpreters

49
Child protection meetings
  • Attendance at conferences
  • Protection plans omit objectives and outcomes
  • Removal from the register
  • Use of strategy meetings
  • Proliferation of meeting types

50
Case management
  • File management reading, recording decisions,
    auditing
  • Case closure
  • Chronologies
  • CP and teenagers
  • Effectiveness of Emergency Duty Teams

51
Training
  • General disquiet over the level of training in
    child protection
  • Specific training for children's services and
    mental health workers
  • Enhanced training for conference chairs and or
    independent professionals
  • Interagency training to cover the roles and
    priorities of the key agencies

52
References
  • Brandon M. et al (2008) Analysing child deaths
    and serious injury through abuse and neglect
    What can we learn? London, Department for
    Children. Schools and Families
  • Falkov, A. (1996) A Study of Working Together
    Part 8 Reports Fatal Child Abuse and Parental
    Psychiatric Disorder, London Department of
    Health
  • James, G. (1994) Study of Working Together Part 8
    Reports, London Department of Health
  • Owers, M., Brandon, M. and Black, J. (1999)
    Learning How to Make Children Safer An Analysis
    for the Welsh Office of Serious Child Abuse Cases
    in Wales, University of East Anglia/Welsh Office
  • Sinclair, R and Bullock, R (2002) Learning from
    Past Experience A Review of Serious Case
    Reviews, London Department of Health

53

Learning from Public Enquiries
  • The unholy trinity following cp tragedies
  • aggressive public pillorying of agencies
  • ever more detailed recommendations resulting from
    public enquiries
  • increasingly intricately wrought practice
    guidance from central government

54

CLIMATIC CONDITIONS
  • Climate of fear
  • Climate of mistrust
  • Climate of blame

55
HOW DID WE GET TO WHERE WE ARE NOW?
  • This history may create a system
  • excessively concerned with identifying and
    eliminating danger rather than promoting
    well-being and undertaking treatment or therapy.
  • excessively concerned with procedures and process
    rather than with objectives and outcomes.
  • defensive, reactive and concerned with the
    collection of evidence at the expense of the
    assessment of need and proactive, co-operative,
    preventive provision.

56
Trusting procedures
  • Procedural proliferation
  • Blaming and training
  • The myth of predictability

57
Procedures as a net to catch problems
58
Procedures as a net to catch problems
59
Procedures as a net to catch problems
60
Procedures as a net to catch problems
61
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