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Understanding and assessing neglect

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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: Understanding and assessing neglect


1
Understanding and assessing neglect
  • 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
  • NEGLECT
  • Neglect is the persistent failure to meet a
    childs basic physical and/or psychological
    needs, likely to result in the serious impairment
    of the childs health or development. Neglect may
    occur during pregnancy as a result of maternal
    substance abuse. Once a child is born, neglect
    may involve a parent or carer failing to
  • provide adequate food, clothing and shelter
  • protect from physical and emotional harm or
    danger
  • ensure adequate supervision
  • ensure access to medical care or treatment.
  • It may also include neglect of, or
    unresponsiveness to, a childs basic emotional
    needs.

3
  • NEGLECT
  • Neglect is the persistent failure to meet a
    childs basic physical and/or psychological
    needs, likely to result in the serious impairment
    of the childs health or development. Neglect may
    occur during pregnancy as a result of maternal
    substance abuse. Once a child is born, neglect
    may involve a parent or carer failing to
  • provide adequate food, clothing and shelter
  • protect from physical and emotional harm or
    danger
  • ensure adequate supervision
  • ensure access to medical care or treatment.
  • It may also include neglect of, or
    unresponsiveness to, a childs basic emotional
    needs.

4
  • NEGLECT
  • Neglect is the persistent failure to meet a
    childs basic physical and/or psychological
    needs, likely to result in the serious impairment
    of the childs health or development. Neglect may
    occur during pregnancy as a result of maternal
    substance abuse. Once a child is born, neglect
    may involve a parent or carer failing to
  • provide adequate food, clothing and shelter
  • protect from physical and emotional harm or
    danger
  • ensure adequate supervision
  • ensure access to medical care or treatment.
  • It may also include neglect of, or
    unresponsiveness to, a childs basic emotional
    needs.

5
  • NEGLECT
  • Neglect is the persistent failure to meet a
    childs basic physical and/or psychological
    needs, likely to result in the serious impairment
    of the childs health or development. Neglect may
    occur during pregnancy as a result of maternal
    substance abuse. Once a child is born, neglect
    may involve a parent or carer failing to
  • provide adequate food, clothing and shelter
  • protect from physical and emotional harm or
    danger
  • ensure adequate supervision
  • ensure access to medical care or treatment.
  • It may also include neglect of, or
    unresponsiveness to, a childs basic emotional
    needs.

6
  • 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.

7
  • 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!!....

8
  • 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!

9
  • 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!!....

10
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.

11
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

12
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15
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.

16
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)

17
Neglect
  • Behavioural
  • Constant hunger
  • Constant tiredness
  • Frequent lateness or non-attendance at school
  • Destructive tendencies

18
Neglect
  • Low self-esteem
  • Neurotic behaviour
  • No social relationships
  • Running away
  • Compulsive stealing or scavenging

19
Neglect
  • Physical
  • Poor personal hygiene
  • Poor state of clothing
  • Emaciation, pot belly, short stature
  • Poor skin and hair tone
  • Untreated medical problems

20
Significant harm
  • Harm is defined by Children Act 1989
  • ill-treatment (including sexual abuse and, by
    implication, physical abuse)
  • impairment of health (physical or mental) or
    development (physical, intellectual, emotional,
    social or behavioural)

21
The child's basic needs
  • basic physical care
  • affection
  • security
  • stimulation of innate potential
  • guidance and control
  • responsibility
  • independence

22
Why do parents neglect?
  • We need to understand the interaction between
  • 3 Ns Nurture, Nature, Now
  • Circumstantial factors and fundamental factors

23
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

24
Forms 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
  • (Howe, D (2005) Child Abuse and Neglect,
    Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan)

25
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
  • Associated with avoidant/defended patterns of
    attachment

26
Emotional neglect parents
  • Cant cope with childrens demands
    avoid/disengage from child in need dismissive or
    punitive response
  • Children provided for materially but there is a
    failure to connect emotionally
  • More rules everyone has a role and knows what to
    do.
  • Parents may feel awkward tense when alone with
    their children.

27
Emotional neglect children
  • When attachment behaviour rejected
  • Learns that caregivers physical and emotional
    availability is reduced when emotional demands
    are made
  • Caregiver most available when child is showing
    positive affect, being self-sufficient,
    undemanding and compliant
  • Reverse roles, false brightness to care for/
    reassure parent.

28
Emotional neglect children
  • Frightened, unhappy, anxious, low self-esteem
  • Withdrawn, isolated, fear intimacy and dependence
  • Precocious, streetwise, self-reliant

29
Emotional neglect children
  • May show compliance to dominant caregivers but
    anger and aggression in situations where they
    feel more dominant.
  • May learn that power and aggression are how
    relationships work and you get your needs met
  • Behaviour increasingly anti-social and
    oppositional
  • Brain development affected difficulties in
    processing and regulating emotional arousal

30
Emotional neglect case management
  • Help parents to learn to use others for support.
  • Teach parents to engage emotionally with their
    children.
  • Must be highly structured as neither parent or
    child know how to interact normally
    spontaneously.
  • Fear of affect need clear rules roles

31
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
  • Worker may feel agenda co-opted by familys
    immediate needs

32
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
  • May be regarded as overwhelmed but amenable to
    services
  • Crisis is a necessary not a contingent state
  • Associated with ambivalent/coercive patterns of
    attachment

33
Disorganised neglect carers
  • Cope with babies (babies need them) but then
  • Parental responses to children
  • unpredictable and insensitive (though not
    necessarily hostile or rejecting).
  • driven by how the parent is feeling, not the
    needs of the child
  • Lack of attunement and synchronicity

34
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

35
Disorganised neglect case management
  • Logic would argue for warding off crises for a
    while so that families can be taught to organise
    their lives, but
  • Family may want to have needs met, but cannot
    delay gratification or trust logic and planning
  • Without intense demands associated with crises,
    have no way of being important to others
  • Will CREATE new crises.

36
Disorganised neglect case management
  • Feelings must be addressed
  • Need a structured, predictable environment with
    no surprises where
  • There are rewards for clear, direct, and
    undistorted communication of feelings and
    accurate cognitive information about future
    outcomes
  • Family can learn the value of compromise
  • Teach parents how to use cognitive information to
    regulate feelings (without denying them)

37
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)

38
Depressed neglect carers
  • Often severely abused/neglected own parents
    depressed or sexually or physically abusive
  • May seem unmotivated, mild learning disability
  • Learned helplessness in response to demands of
    family life
  • Stubborn negativism passive-aggressive
  • Have given up both thinking and feeling

39
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

40
Depressed neglect children
  • Younger the child, more debilitating the effects
  • 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

41
Depressed neglect case management
  • Involves much more than teaching appropriate
    parenting
  • All family members must learn that their
    behaviour has predictable and meaningful
    consequences
  • Teach that it helps to share feelings with
    empathetic others.

42
Depressed neglect case management
  • Our standard approaches dont work
  • Threats / punitive approaches particularly
    ineffective
  • Parents dont believe they can change so dont
    even try.
  • Even most reasonable pressure results in
    shutting down / blocking out all info.
  • Parent education may be ineffective because
    judgment impaired and gains not transferable.

43
Depressed neglect case management
  • These families need
  • Long term involvement
  • Supportive approach
  • Responsiveness to familys signals and needs
  • BUT these need to be balanced with a recognition
    of the childrens needs. (How long is too long?
    How much is too much?)

44
Depressed neglect infants and children
  • Must experience responsive and stimulating
    environments that also provide human comfort for
    a few hours each day.
  • The longer the child is exposed to helplessness,
    the more intense and longer the intervention
    needed to remedy the situation.

45
Depressed neglect parents
  • Must learn appropriate ways to show their
    feelings
  • Practice smiling, laughing, soothing
  • May be mechanical at first
  • Genuine feelings will emerge with repetition
  • As parents learn to show their feelings, the
    childs responsiveness will increase virtuous
    spiral

46
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

47
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

48
Severe deprivation case management
  • Highly unlikely to be in the childs best
    interests to remain in the environment which
    caused the harm
  • It is probable that the child and new carers will
    require substantial therapeutic and emotional
    support
  • Significant challenges often persist despite a
    move to a caring and predictable environment.

49
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

50
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

51
Our image of assessment
52
The reality of assessment?
53
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

54
The pattern of neglect
55
The pattern of neglect
56
The pattern of neglect
57
The pattern of neglect
58
Cumulativeness
59
Failure of cumulativeness
60
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

61
Assessment Pitfalls
  • Parents behaviour, whether co-operative or
    uncooperative, is often misinterpreted
  • Not enough weight to information from family
    friends and neighbours
  • Attention is focused on the most visible or
    pressing problems 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
  • Not enough attention is paid to what children
    say, how they look and how they behave
    maintenance of a wholly child-centred approach
  • In Cleaver, H, Wattam, C and Cawson, P Assessing
    Risk in Child Protection, NSPCC, 1998

62
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)

63
Information handling
  • Picking out the important from a mass of data
  • Interpretation
  • Too trusting/insufficiently critical Facts
    recorded faithfully but not always critically
    appraised
  • Mistrusted source
  • 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

64
Information handling
65
Serious Case Reviews
  • Failure to give sufficient weight to relevant
    case history Start again syndrome
  • Failure to recognised increased vulnerability of
    neglected children
  • Use of trained staff
  • Assessment of male carers
  • Maintenance of a wholly child-centred approach
  • Too much mouth and ears, not enough eyes

66
So what?
  • We have spent some time considering how to
    recognise and respond to neglect.
  • What does this mean for us? What are the
    implications for services in South Wales? What,
    if anything, will be different?

67
Working with resistance
  • In many cases parents were hostile to helping
    agencies and workers were often frightened to
    visit family homes. These circumstances could
    have a paralysing effect on practitioners,
    hampering their ability to reflect, make
    judgments, act clearly, and to follow through
    with referrals, assessments or plans. Apparent or
    disguised cooperation from parents often
    prevented or delayed understanding of the
    severity of harm to the child and cases drifted.
    Where parents made it difficult for professionals
    to see children or engineered the focus away from
    allegations of harm, children went unseen and
    unheard.
  • Families tended to be ambivalent or hostile
    towards helping agencies, and staff were often
    fearful of violent and hostile men. Although
    parents tended to avoid agencies, agencies also
    avoided or rebuffed parents by offering a
    succession of workers, closing the case, losing
    files or key information, by re-assessing ,
    referring on, or through initiating and then
    dropping court proceedings.
  • Brandon, M, and others (2008) Analysing child
    deaths and serious injury through abuse and
    neglect what can we learn? London Department
    for Children, Schools and Families

68
Engagement
  • Engagement is the basic task of a child and
    families worker but can never be taken for
    granted and must always be worked for

69
Context
  • Involuntary work may be characterised by
  • Guardedness or reluctance to share information
  • Avoidance and a desire to leave the relationship
  • Strong negative feelings such as anxiety, anger,
    suspicion, guilt or despair.

70
Context
  • We need to accept that
  • The best we may be able to achieve is honesty
    rather than positive feelings and a high degree
    of mutuality
  • Conflict and disagreement are not something to be
    avoided, but are realities that must be explored
    and understood.

71
How might resistance show itself?
  • By only being prepared to consider 'safe' or low
    priority areas for discussion.
  • By not turning up for appointments
  • By being overly co-operative with professionals.
  • By being verbally/and or physically aggressive.
  • By minimising the issues.
  • (Egan, 1994)

72
Potential parental responses
  • Genuine commitment
  • Compliance / approval seeking
  • Tokenism
  • Dissent / avoidance
  • (Horwath and Morrison, 2000)

73
Identifying resistance 4 categories
  • Hostile resistance anger threats, intimidation,
    shouting
  • Passive aggressive surface compliance covers
    partly concealed antagonism and anger
  • Passive hopeless Tearfulness and despair about
    change
  • Challenging Cure me if you can!

74
Strategies for enhancing engagement
  • Before you start, check your mindset (your own
    biases and assumptions)
  • Have realistic expectations
  • It is reasonable that involuntary clients resent
    being forced to participate
  • Because they are forced to participate,
    hostility, silence and non-compliance are common
    responses that do not reflect my skills as a
    worker
  • Due to the barriers created by the practice
    situation, clients may have little opportunity to
    discover if they like me
  • Lack of client co-operation is due to the
    practice situation, not to my specific actions
    and activities
  • (Ivanoff et al, 1994 )

75
During initial contacts
  • Adopt a non-defensive stance
  • Be clear, honest and direct and acknowledge the
    involuntary nature of the relationship
  • Clarify roles and expectations, including what is
    required of the client
  • Explain consequences of non-compliance and the
    advantages of compliance
  • (Ivanoff et al, 1994 )

76
Try to
  • Invite participation
  • Understand how the client sees the problem as
    well as how we see it
  • Understand what the client wants, as well as what
    we want
  • (Ivanoff et al, 1994 )

77
What might we be doing to make it worse?
  • Becoming impatient and hostile
  • Doing nothing, hoping the resistance will go away
  • Lowering expectations
  • Blaming the family member
  • Allowing the family member to control the
    assessment inappropriately
  • Failing to acknowledge our fear

78
What might we be doing to make it worse?
  • Becoming unrealistic
  • Believing that family members must like and trust
    us before assessment can proceed.
  • Ignoring the enforcing role of some aspects of
    child protection work and hence refusing to place
    any demands on family members.
  • (Egan, 1994)

79
Avoid
  • Expressions of over-concern
  • Moralising
  • Criticising the client
  • Making false promises
  • Displaying impatience

80
Avoid
  • Ridiculing the client
  • Blaming the client for his/her failures
  • Being dogmatic
  • Rejecting the clients right to express different
    values and preferences
  • (Ivanoff et al, 1994 )

81
Productive approaches
  • Give practical, emotional support - especially by
    being available, predictable and consistent
  • See some resistance and reluctance as normal
  • Explore our own resistance to change and by
    examining the quality of our own interventions
    and communication style
  • (Egan, 1994)

82
Productive approaches
  • Helping family members to identify incentives for
    moving beyond resistance
  • Tapping the potential of other people who are
    respected as partners by the family member
  • Understanding that reluctance and resistance may
    be avoidance or a signal that we are not doing
    our job very well
  • (Egan, 1994)

83
Confrontation
  • In child welfare services, the Childrens Service
    Worker must be a skilled confronter.
    Confrontation is, basically, facing the client
    with the facts in the situation and with the
    probable consequences of behaviours
  • (Texas Department of Human Resources)

84
A scale for assessing motivation
  • Shows concern and has realistic confidence.
  • Shows concern, but lacks confidence.
  • Seems concerned, but impulsive or careless
  • Indifferent or apathetic about problems
  • Rejection of parental role.

85
Shows concern and has realistic confidence.
  • Parent is concerned about childrens welfare
    wants to meet their physical, social, and
    emotional needs to the extent he/she understands
    them.
  • Parent is determined to act in best interests of
    children
  • Has realistic confidence that he/she can overcome
    problems and is willing to ask for help when
    needed
  • Is prepared to make sacrifices for children.

86
Shows concern, but lacks confidence
  • Parent is concerned about childrens welfare and
    wants to meet their needs, but lacks confidence
    that problems can be overcome
  • May be unwilling for some reason to ask for help
    when needed. Feels unsure of own abilities or is
    embarrassed
  • But uses good judgement whenever he/she takes
    some action to solve problems.

87
Seems concerned, but impulsive or careless
  • Parent seems concerned about childrens welfare
    and claims he/she wants to meet their needs, but
    has problems with carelessness, mistakes and
    accidents. Professed concern is often not
    translated into effective action.
  • May be disorganised, not take enough time, or
    pays insufficient attention may misread
    signals from children may exercise poor
    judgement.
  • Does not seem to intentionally violate proper
    parental role shows remorse.

88
Indifferent or apathetic about problems
  • Parent is not concerned enough about childrens
    needs to resist temptations, eg competing
    demands on time and money. This leads to one or
    more of the childrens needs not being met.
  • Parent does not have the right priorities when
    it comes to child care may take a cavalier or
    indifferent attitude. There may be a lack of
    interest in the children and in their welfare and
    development.
  • Parent does not actively reject the parental role.

89
Rejection of parental role
  • Parent actively rejects parental role, taking a
    hostile attitude toward child care
    responsibilities.
  • Believes that child care is an imposition, and
    may ask to be relieved of that responsibility.
    May take the attitude that it isnt his or her
    job.
  • May seek to give up the responsibility for
    children
  • (Magura et al,1987)
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