Title: Advocating for Children
1Advocating for Children
- Tony Waterston
- Newcastle upon Tyne
2Sweden - Child Heaven?
3Newcastle- not child heaven?
4(No Transcript)
5outline
- The meaning of advocacy
- Advocacy in history
- Why advocacy is needed now
- Principles behind advocacy
- Training for advocacy
- Some examples
6The meaning of advocacy
- Speaking out on behalf of a particular issue,
idea or person - Children require advocacy as they are vulnerable
and cannot usually speak out for themselves - Paediatricians are effective advocates as they
are objective and carry influence
7Levels of advocacy
- The child in front of you- required by every
clinician - Public policy advocacy - required by those who
want to bring about change
8Advocacy in History the American Academy of
Pediatrics
- 1929 conflict between the paediatricians and the
AMA leadership over a federal health programme in
Maternal and Child Health - Paediatricians met and concluded that a national
paediatric society was needed - A united front to influence paediatrics in its
various phases sociologic, hygienic,
educational, investigative, and clinical". - Since then, advocacy has been an important part
of the work of the AAP
9An American paediatrician
- Murray Katcher in 1980s, decided that he had
taken care of too many children with hot water
burns - He found that, by simply lowering the temperature
at which hot water heaters are set, less children
would suffer serious water burns - With the help of the AAP he developed model
legislation that would mandate lowering water
heater temperature settings - Eventually a public education campaign was
launched to lower the setting of older water
heater
10A British paediatrician
- In the 1960s, Hugh Jackson encountered a child
who had taken 10 imipramine tablets prescribed
for his mother's depression - The child developed severe fits and arrhythmia,
and died within 24 hours. - The mother said, "nobody told me it could do any
harm" - Jackson, shocked over this failure, conducted a
survey into the circumstances of accidental
poisoning, published in 1968 - He later became a member of the national
committee on poisoning, which set up a test team
for developing childproof medication containers.
11Other examples
- Parents staying in hospital in UK Sir James
Spence - Banning corporal punishment in Sweden?
- Nuclear weapons - IPPNW and the Nobel Peace Prize
1985
12Why advocacy is needed for children now
- They cannot vote
- They rarely have access to the courts
- They are not members of trades unions or
professional associations - They have little or no access to the media
- They do not have powerful lobbies acting on their
behalf to counter the well-resourced and
sophisticated corporate lobbies that increasingly
influence governments
13The Impact of Public Policy on Childrens Rights
to the Best Possible Health
- Child poverty has a profound impact on childrens
physical, mental, emotional and psychological
well-being. -
- Childhood accidents can be exacerbated by the
priority given to road users over pedestrians, by
failure to invest in road safety programs, and
lack of attention to safety in design of public
spaces. -
- Environmental pollution is damaging the health of
millions of children, for example, through toxic
emissions, the widespread use of chemical
pesticides, exposure to lead in older homes and
in soil, etc.
14The Impact of Public Policy on Childrens Rights
to the Best Possible Health
- The fashion industry is encouraging increasing
numbers of young girls to aspire to images of
thinness which cannot be attained while eating a
normal diet, resulting in a significant rise in
the incidence of bulimia and anorexia. -
- Food advertising targeted at children encourages
a desire for foods that are high in fat, sugar
and salt, leading to greater incidence of obesity
and other chronic diseases.
15The Impact of Public Policy on Childrens Rights
to the Best Possible Health
- Violence. Children in many countries in the
world are the only group of people not protected
in law from all forms of violence. - Discriminatory laws and practices can and do
cause profound damage to childrens health and
well being increasing the likelihood of mental
illness and low self-esteem and depression, as
well as poorer physical health.
16silence is the voice of complicity
17Principles behind advocacy
- UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
- Other human rights legislation
- National legislation (in UK, the Children Act)
- General Medical Council, UKGuidance 0-18yr
18The basis of advocacy The UN Convention on the
Rights of the Child
19UNCRC 1989
- Promotion
- Protection
- Participation
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21Protection 2 discrimination 16 privacy 19
violence 22 refugee 32 economic
exploitation 34 sexual abuse
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23General Medical Council The regulator of the
medical profession in the UK
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25Training for advocacy
- A competency-based approach
- A training course with American Academy of
Pediatrics
26Comparing advocacy with communication skills
- Communication
- Knowledge of psychology
- Understanding the needs of children
- Empathy with parents and children
- Understanding problems of poor communication
- Skills of listening
- Advocacy
- Knowledge of how systems work
- Understanding childrens rights
- Empathy with children
- Understanding the problems of children in society
- Skills of finding the source of the problem
27RCPCH Competencies in relation to advocacy
- Understand the responsibility of paediatricians
to consider all aspects of a childs well-being
including biological, psychological and social
factors - Develop a commitment to a policy of advocacy for
a healthy lifestyle in children and young people
and for the protection of their rights - Know the principles of the UN Convention on the
Rights of the Child, apply these in their own
practice and work for the protection of these
rights - Be aware of child health exploitation issues
including child prostitution, child labour and
children in combat
28A training course
- Available at www.essop.org
- RCPCH, ESSOP and AAP
- Currently developing a toolkit for training
paediatricians - assistance needed!
29Encouraging advocacy by paediatricians
- USA AAP CATCH programme
- UK RCPCH Advocacy Committee and Advocacy award
30Examples of advocacy 1. Alican an asylum seeker
- Learning difficulties child, 8yrs
- Harassed by local children
- Housing very poor
- Mother at risk of deportation
- Action letters to housing, councillor, home
office, meeting with housing - Result deportation prevented
312. Corporal punishment
- Campaigning to change the law in the UK to ban
corporal punishment in the home - Children are Unbeatable Alliance
- RCPCH joins the lobbyists
- Joint letter to Ministry by seven childrens
organisations re changing the law
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33 3. Childrens rights in RCPCH
- Motion at annual meeting that childrens rights
should be incorporated in all work of College - Annual training day and a representative on each
committee - Appointment of participation officer
- Consultation exercise on work of the College
344. Elsevier and the arms trade
- Arms sales and children a holocaust
- The arms trade a function of rich nations
- The arms trade links with health
- Reed Elsevier, the Lancet and arms
35Lancet 10th Sept 2005 p.868
361996-7
- RCPCH and Elsevier
- Lobbying by health professionals
- Petition on line and letter writing, threat of
boycott of Elsevier journals - RCPCH writes to Chief Executive to warn of
possible withdrawal
37The Lancet 9th June 2007
38Other current issues
- Climate change - the RCPCH has a target to become
carbon neutral - A TV programme on parenting
39The future
- In a child-centred society there should be little
need for advocacy - However there will always be a need for
paediatricians to speak out on behalf of their
patients - There are trends in Western society which are not
in the interests of all children - we must stand
together
40The true measure of a nations
standing is how well it attends to its children
their health and safety, their material
security, their education and socialization, and
their sense of being loved, valued, and
included in the families and societies into
which they are born. UNICEF 2007, Wellbeing
report
41Goodbye, and good luck!