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Keeping the child in focus

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Title: Keeping the child in focus


1
Keeping the child in focus
  • Leah Bromfield Briony Horsfall
  • National Child Protection Clearinghouse

2
National Child Protection Clearinghouse
  • The Clearinghouse provides a range of services to
    policy makers, practitioners and the community
  • Research Help-desk for information advice
  • childprotect email discussion list
  • Publications (hard copy and electronic)
  • Library collection (online catalogue)
  • Conference papers, workshops and seminars
  • Website
  • The Clearinghouse also undertakes new research
  • To find out more or to join go to
  • http//www.aifs.gov.au/nch/about.html

3
Overview
  • The child in child protection
  • Why keeping the child in focus is important
  • Child focused practice
  • Why it is hard to keep the child in focus
  • How can we do better?

4
Have we been missing the child in child
protection?
  • The audit
  • Case file audit of 100 families involved with
    Child Protection from 1994-2002
  • Sub-set of 36 cases
  • Frequency count of activities recorded in case
    files
  • Limitations
  • Only recorded activities
  • Frequency of activity types not time taken for
    activities
  • Excludes administrative activities (i.e.
    recording case files)

Bromfield (2005)
5
Audit of activities recorded in case files(n
36 cases)
Bromfield (2005)
6
Audit of activities recorded in case files(n
36 cases)
Bromfield (2005)
7
Have we been missing the child in child
protection?
  • During investigation phase
  • 47 home visits, 37 interviews with parents, the
    children were recorded as having been sighted on
    35 occasions, and as being interviewed on 26
    occasions
  • During case management phase
  • 174 home visits, 593 phone calls with parents,
    275 instances of sighting the child, and 28
    instances where the case files include a record
    of the case worker speaking with the child. There
    were 1,164 phone calls to service providers
    recorded.

Bromfield (2005)
8
Have we been missing the child in child
protection?
  • Concluded
  • The most common activity undertaken by statutory
    child protection workers was telephone calls
  • Calls were made predominantly to professionals
    and services involved with the family
  • Contacts with families were primarily between
    workers and parents (e.g. during case management
    telephone contact, office and home visits with
    parents represented 23 of activities)
  • In comparison, contact with children (e.g.
    transporting children, supervising access,
    sighting and speaking with children) represented
    10 of activities

Bromfield (2005)
9
Mothers of primary client
  • Study of 100 families involved with child
    protection services in Victoria found that
    mothers rather than children were the primary
    client of child protection services
  • Family 8, notification 5Children witnessed
    domestic violence perpetrated by their
    step-father (mothers de facto) against their
    mother. With the assistance of professionals from
    a domestic violence service the mother was able
    to evict the perpetrator from the home.
  • Family 64, Notification 4Police attended a call
    out, observed broken glass near babys cot
    (broken during domestic dispute). Mother left the
    father as a consequence of the domestic assault
    and was assessed to be acting protectively
    towards her child.

Bromfield (2005)
10
Mothers as primary client
  • Concluded that focusing exclusively on mothers
    problems may result in statutory child protection
    services
  • failing to assess the impact of maltreatment on
    children, and
  • consequently failing to facilitate service
    provision to ameliorate the effects of
    maltreatment.

11
Why keep the child in focus?
  • We keep the child in focus
  • to ensure their immediate safety
  • to help them develop safe and well
  • to uphold their human rights

12
Immediate safety
  • An estimated 25 Australian children are killed by
    their parents each year (Mouzos Rushforth,
    2003)
  • In response to the death of an infant, the WA
    Child death review committee (2008) noted
  • an issue of concern for the Committee was the
    lack of a child focus particularly as not all
    children in the family were seen and/or
    interviewed when concerns had been expressed (p.
    35)

13
Immediate safety
  • The WA Child Death Review Committee (2008)
    emphasised the importance of sighting and knowing
    the child and their siblings
  • Similarly, the Victorian Child Death Review
    Committee (2008) profiled direct contact with
    children as an element of positive case practice
  • Cooper (2005) commenting on prominent child death
    reviews in the UK also observed that there was a
    need to ensure the frequent physical sighting of
    vulnerable children

14
Children develop safe and well
  • Child protection services keep cases open when
    they have assessed the child will be at risk of
    further abuse and neglect without their
    involvement
  • Abuse and neglect puts children at imminent
    physical risk
  • Repeated and prolonged instances of maltreatment
    also put children at risk of cumulative harm

Bromfield Miller (2007)
15
Children develop safe and well
  • Researchers investigating brain development have
    used the term toxic stress to describe the
    prolonged activation of the stress management
    system without support (e.g. repeated incidents
    of maltreatment)
  • Toxic stress can damage the developing brain
  • Practitioners need to observe and interact with
    the child to see if they are
  • Meeting developmental milestones, or
  • Experiencing trauma symptoms

Bromfield Miller (2007)
16
Uphold childrens human rights
  • Australia is a signatory to the United Nations
    Convention on the Rights of the Child (ratified
    December 1990)
  • Principles of the Convention are embedded in
    legislation and policy regulating provision of
    child protection services in Australia

17
UN Convention on Rights of the Child
  • Key principles include
  • Article 3. 1. In all actions concerning children
    the best interests of the child shall be a
    primary consideration.
  • Article 6.2. Parties shall ensure to the maximum
    extent possible the survival and development of
    the child.
  • Article 9.1. Parties shall ensure that a child
    shall not be separated from his or her parents
    against their will, except when such separation
    is necessary for the best interests of the child
    ...
  • Article 12.1. Parties shall assure to the child
    who is capable of forming his or her own views
    the right to express those views freely in all
    matters affecting the child, the views of the
    child being given due weight in accordance with
    the age and maturity of the child.

www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/k2crc.htm
18
Voices of the child
  • Uphold childrens human rights by supporting and
    recognising the agency of the child
  • Giving children appropriate information and
    opportunities to participate in decisions that
    affect them
  • Needs to be appropriate to context and stage of
    development
  • Children may give their view directly and/or
    indirectly via a trusted adult/advocate
  • Not just at formal decision making points, but
    routinely by visiting and talking with the child

Winkworth McArthur (2006a)
19
Child centred practice
  • In 2008, Tasmania adopted a new practice
    framework
  • The practice framework was developed in New
    Zealand by Dr Marie Connolly
  • The practice framework comprises three sets of
    philosophical principles guiding practice
  • Child-centred
  • Family-led and culturally responsive
  • Strengths and evidence-based
  • Prioritises a child-centred approach

20
Why it is hard to keep the child in focus
  • Systemic issues
  • Pragmatic constraints
  • Individual attributes

21
Why it is hard to keep the child in focus
  • Systemic issues
  • Issues associated with the nature and structure
    of child protection and the legal and policy
    framework regulating practice that reduce (often
    inadvertently) the focus on the child

22
Decision-making study
  • Lack of child focus not always obvious
  • For example, in Victoria the definition of a
    child in need of protection is framed in relation
    to the child having been, or being likely to be,
    significantly harmed
  • On surface, child focussed draws attention to
    impact on child rather than parental actions

Bromfield (2005)
23
Decision-making study
  • Case file review of records for 100 families over
    8-year period (1994-2002)
  • Impact of the maltreatment on the child was not
    identified in 64/82 substantiations
  • Impact of harm on child most likely to be
    identified where it was easily linked to recent
    events (short-term outcomes) and physically
    observable by professionals (eg bruising)

Bromfield (2005)
24
Decision-making study
  • Lack of attention to the psychological and
    developmental impact of child maltreatment
    (long-term outcomes) esp. neglect emotional
    abuse
  • Abusive/neglectful behaviour and children being
    placed in risky situations assumed harmful
    without assessment of child
  • For example, Family 8, notification 2
  • Emotional abuse substantiated without any record
    on case file of the children being sighted by a
    child protection practitioner

Bromfield (2005)
25
Decision-making study
  • Focus on harm consequence may lead to difficulty
    in linking specific abusive or neglectful
    behaviours with long-term outcomes for children
  • Family 93, Notification 1 Baby reported with
    poor skin pallor, lethargy, not reaching
    developmental milestones. However, when fed
    infant reportedly responded like a normal baby.
    Reporter believed that mother was failing to feed
    infant regular meals. Child protection advised
    that there was insufficient information on
    specific incidents of neglect to warrant
    protective involvement and the case was closed at
    intake (Unsubstantiated)

Bromfield (2005)
26
Decision-making study
  • Concluded
  • Despite a legislative focus on child outcomes,
  • In practice, child outcomes were overlooked in
    the process of making risk assessments and case
    decisions

Bromfield (2005)
27
Review of policy procedure manual
  • Winkworth McArthur (2006a, 2006b) undertook a
    review of the ACT Child Protection policy
    procedure manual to determine the extent to which
    practice standards were child-centred

Winkworth McArthur (2006a, 2006b)
28
Review of policy procedure manual
  • They defined child-centred practice principles
    as
  • Recognising critical timeframes - early in the
    life of the child and early in the life of the
    problem
  • Accounting for developmental needs of children in
    all practice contexts
  • Providing children and young people appropriate
    opportunities for participation
  • Promoting collaborative practice - sharing
    information, recognising interactions between
    levels of childs environment (home, school,
    neighbourhood)

Winkworth McArthur (2006a)
29
Review of policy procedure manual
  • Child protection legislation and policy were not
    necessarily written with a child-focused approach
  • Failure to be child-focussed can be unintentional
  • For example, the emphasis on family support can
    unwittingly detract from childrens perspectives
    and experiences
  • It can take time for child-focused amendments to
    legislation and policy to reach practice

Winkworth McArthur (2006a)
30
Why it is hard to keep the child in focus
  • Pragmatic constraints
  • Pragmatic constraints are factors unlikely to
    change in the short-to-medium term and over which
    practitioners, policy-makers, and their
    respective organisations have little influence
  • For example, organisational structure, resources,
    capacity to implement change, work roles, the
    economic and political climate, and prevailing
    community attitudes

Holzer, Lewig, Bromfield Arney (2007, p.12)
31
Pragmatic constraints
  • Practitioners have expressed concern about the
    day-to-day demands of the job, large caseloads,
    competing priorities within cases and staff
    shortages (Holzer, Lewig, Bromfield Arney,
    2007, p. 12)
  • Winkworth McArthur (2006b) noted that
    increasingly complex and procedurally driven care
    and protection processes mean that there is a
    risk that the childs experience of these
    processes become lost
  • The Victoria Climbie Inquiry in the UK found that
    procedural guidance could obscure rather than
    illuminate the childs perspective

Winkworth McArthur (2006b)
32
Pragmatic constraints
  • Winkworth McArthur (2006b) observe
  • With so many agendas running concurrently it is
    easy to lose sight of the child in these
    processes and to allow other interests to
    dominate (p. 5)
  • They concluded that
  • Being child centred means being guided by
    contemporary knowledge about the welfare of
    children and young people and includes keeping
    the child and young persons perspective and
    experience uppermost in all considerations (p. 5)

Winkworth McArthur (2006b)
33
Why it is hard to keep the child in focus
  • Individual attributes
  • A persons own values, beliefs, assumptions and
    experiences are likely to influence the manner in
    which individuals practice and the way in which
    they react to the nature of the work

34
Individual attributes
  • Personal risks and safety
  • Child protection practitioners are routinely
    expected to visit the homes of violent people
  • Potential harm to practitioners is a real risk
  • Threats of violence and hostility associated with
    home visits are stressful

Stanley Goddard (2002, p. 119)
35
Individual attributes
  • Emotional labour of child protection work
  • Child protection can be emotionally intrusive to
    the practitioner
  • Practitioners need to manage their feelings
    (internal) and emotional expression (external) in
    interactions with multiple others (managers,
    colleagues, parents, and children)
  • Emotional labour of engaging with children and
    developing a relationship may impact child
    focused practice

Gibbs (2001, p.327)
36
Individual attributes
  • Therapeutic collusion
  • The challenge of balancing empathy for the
    parent/s who may be trying to cope with their own
    difficulties and making some effort to change,
    with the needs of the child
  • When there may be desire on behalf of the parent
    for change but progress to address serious
    adverse impact on child has been insufficient

Cousins (2005)
37
Individual attributes
  • Normal ways of coping can de-centre the child
  • Individual reactions to the nature of the work
    and strategies for maintaining physical and
    emotional safety (conscious and unconscious) may
    contribute to decisions not to visit the family
    home and to see and talk with the child
  • Focus on, and empathy for, parents may prevent
    practitioners from seeing that parents have not
    been able to make changes or to progress fast
    enough to meet the needs of their children

38
How can we do better?
  • Keeping the child in focus in case work
  • Assessment - Assess impact on child of
    environment or events (short- and long-term
    effects matter)
  • Planning - Engage child in decisions effecting
    their lives
  • Action - Thoughtful interventions that assist
    child in recovery as well as addressing safety
  • Review - Good practice can involve trial and
    error - have your interventions changed things
    for the child

39
How can we do better?
  • Supervision reflective practice
  • Beyond case management, supervision can ensure
    emotional and cognitive support for practitioners
    (Gibbs, 2001 Munro, 2002)
  • Training
  • Training for case workers, carers and residential
    workers to engage children with developmentally
    appropriate and culturally sensitive approaches
    (Osborn Bromfield, 2007)

40
How can we do better?
  • Recognise systemic and pragmatic constraints
  • Munro (2005) recommends a systems approach to
    analysing and responding to child protection
    failures
  • One step at a time
  • Systemic change takes time
  • Strength in Tasmania - Practice framework with an
    explicit child centred approach

41
Discussion
  • In your practice
  • Are there issues that make it difficult to be
    child centred? What are they?
  • What would help you to be more child centred?
  • What can change now?

42
National Child Protection Clearinghouse
  • Australian Institute of Family Studies
  • Level 20, 485 La Trobe Street Melbourne
  • 03 9214 7888
  • www.aifs.gov.au/nch
  • This presentation can be downloaded
    fromwww.aifs.gov.au/nch/pubs/presentations/diary

43
References
  • Bromfield, L. (2005). Chronic Child Maltreatment
    in an Australian Statutory Child Protection
    Sample. Unpublished Phd Thesis, Deakin
    University, Geelong.
  • Bromfield, L., Miller, R. (2007). Specialist
    Practice Guide Cumulative Harm. Victorian
    Government Department of Human Services,
    Melbourne.
  • Child Death Review Committee Western Australia.
    (2008). Annual Report 20072008. Government of
    Western Australia, Perth.
  • Cooper, A. (2005). Surface and depth in the
    Victoria Climbie Inquiry report. Child and Family
    Social Work, 10(1), pp. 1-9.
  • Cousins, C. (2005). But the parent is trying
    The dilemmas workers face when children are at
    risk from parental substance abuse. National
    Child Protection Clearinghouse Newsletter, 13(1),
    pp. 3-6.

44
References
  • General Assembly of the United Nations.
    Convention on the Rights of the Child. General
    assembly resolution 44/25 of November
    1989,Office of the High Commissioner for Human
    Rights, Geneva. Retrieved 20th February, 2009
    from www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/k2crc.htm.
  • Gibbs, J. (2001). Maintaining front-line workers
    in child protection A case for refocusing
    supervision. Child Abuse Review, 10, pp.
    323-335.
  • Holzer, P., Lewig, K., Bromfield, L., Arney, F.
    (2007). Research Use in the Australian Child and
    Family Welfare Sector. Australian Institute of
    Family Studies, National Child Protection
    Clearinghouse and University of South Australia,
    Australian Centre for Child Protection,
    Melbourne. Retrieved 23 February, 2009 from
    www.aifs.gov.au/nch/pubs/reports/researchutilisati
    on/stage1/research.pdf

45
References
  • Mouzos, J. Rushforth, C. (2003). Family
    homicide in Australia, Trends Issues in Crime
    and Criminal Justice No. 255. Australian
    Institute of Criminology, Canberra. Retrieved 17
    March, 2008 from http//www.aic.gov.ai/publicatio
    ns/tandi2/tandi255.pdf
  • Munro, E. (2005). Improving practice Child
    protection as a systems problem. Children and
    Youth Services Review, 24(4), pp. 375-391.
  • Munro, E. (2002). Effective Child Protection.
    Sage Publications, London. Osborn, A.
    Bromfield, L. (2007). Participation of children
    and young people in care in decisions affecting
    their lives. Research Brief, 6. Australian
    Institute of Family Studies. Retrieved 23
    February, 2009 from www.aifs.gov.au/nch/pubs/brie
    f/rb6/rb6.html

46
References
  • Stanley, J. Goddard, C. (2002). In the Firing
    Line Violence and Power in Child Protection
    Work. John Wiley Sons, England.
  • Victorian Child Death Review Committee. (2008).
    Annual report of inquiries into the deaths of
    children known to child protection 2008. Office
    of the Child Safety Commissioner, Melbourne.
  • Winkworth, G. McArthur. M. (2006a). Being
    child centred in child protection What does it
    mean? Children Australia, 31(4), pp. 13-21.
  • Winkworth, G. McArthur, M. (2006b). Principles
    for child centred practice. Australian Catholic
    University, Institute of Child Protection
    Studies, Canberra. Retrieved 23 February 2009,
    from http//inet.acu.edu.au/download.cfm/F1F59635
    -AFC1-5109-10D054CA6B292444/x/ICPS_Principles-4-Ch
    ild-Cnetred_Practice.pdf
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