Safeguarding Children living with Foster Carers, Adopters and Special Guardians: Learning from case reviews 2007–2019
Dr Hedy Cleaver, Wendy Rose OBE
£18.99
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Description
Case reviews have played a critical role in helping organisations to improve the safeguarding of children. Since 1988 in England and Wales, where a child has died or come to serious harm, and abuse or neglect is known or suspected, local case reviews have provided useful explanations that can contribute to learning and change.
This good practice guide is based on a UK-wide study of 52 case reviews concerning 98 children who had died or experienced serious harm while living with foster carers, adopters or special guardians. The study spans a 12-year period and is the first to focus exclusively on reviews of cases of children in alternative family care. Consequently, it shines a spotlight on those issues that are particular to these children – the selection and assessment of their carers; the support both children and carers receive; and the supervision and management of such arrangements.
The ability to change and improve practice is dependent on understanding why particular mistakes or failures occurred and learning from them. Various factors, relating to organisational culture, systems and practice, can hinder practitioners and organisations from safeguarding children effectively. This study explores the reviews to identify recurring themes and draws out the dilemmas and challenges for practitioners in carrying out their responsibility to promote and safeguard the welfare of children.
Erratum
Who is this book for?
This is a vital resource for social work practitioners and managers, panel members, commissioners, and all those involved in the care of looked after and adopted children.
What you will find in this book
The guide explores the issues of concern and dilemmas identified as occurring repeatedly in the case reviews, including:
- the assessment and selection of carers: exploring motivations, gaps in information, sensitive issues, carer attitudes, and managing doubt and uncertainty;
- keeping the child at the heart of practice: improving placement planning and preparation, reviewing children’s well-being, listening to children and considering their views, and closely monitoring very vulnerable children;
- supporting carers: the level of supervision and oversight, organisational pressures and their impact, maintaining objectivity;
- being aware of the assumption of safety in foster care and adoption: reluctance to explore unease, asking questions about an absent child, avoiding manipulation, and maintaining authority;
- effective communication and collaboration: between agencies, including health, social care and education, and clarity about responsibilities to share information between services and across local authority boundaries.
Rich with case examples and quotations from the reviews studied, the findings form an authoritative guide as to what can be done in day-to-day social work to reduce the risk of significant harm and child death.