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Identifying and Assessing Neglect using the Graded Care Profile

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Title: Identifying and Assessing Neglect using the Graded Care Profile


1
Identifying and Assessing Neglect using the
Graded Care Profile
  • Patrick Ayre
  • Department of Applied Social Studies
  • University of Bedfordshire
  • Park Square, Luton
  • email pga_at_patrickayre.co.uk
  • Presentation can be downloaded from
  • http//patrickayre.co.uk/Presentationd.htm

2
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)

3
  • 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.

4
  • 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!!....

5
  • 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!

6
  • 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!!....

7
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.

8
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

9
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10
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12
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.

13
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)

14
Emotional development
  • Sensitive period for emotional development up to
    18 months
  • Shaped primarily by the way in which the prime
    carer interacts with the child
  • Emotional deficits harder to overcome once the
    sensitive window has passed.
  • How often do we intervene assertively at this
    point?

15
Building a child
  • Building a child is like building a house, each
    new level built on the one below. If the lower
    levels are unsound, no amount of tinkering with
    the upper floors will make it stable.

16
Capturing chronic abuse
  • Single events often only significant in context
  • Can often only understand present by setting in
    context of past
  • Intangible Difficult to capture and compare
  • High threshold for recognition
  • Neglect is a pattern not an event

17
The pattern of neglect atypical
18
The pattern of neglect
19
The pattern of neglect
20
The pattern of neglect
21
The pattern of neglect
22
Cumulativeness
23
Failure of cumulativeness
24
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 (case, agency and geographical)

25
The assessment of neglect
  • An approach based on the Graded Care Profile by
    Dr OP Shrivastava
  • GCP provides
  • Framework for making assessment
  • Baseline measurement
  • An element of objectivity
  • Judgement about care
  • Reliable standardised evidence
  • http//www.lutonlscb.org/index.php?optioncom_cont
    entviewarticleid183Itemid52

26
GCP uses
  • Pre-referral assessments
  • Snapshot assessments
  • Contribution to CAF assessments
  • Contribution to Core Assessment (parenting
    capacity)
  • Self-assessment (parents and carers)
  • Young persons assessment of parenting
  • Tool for setting goals and assessing progress
  • Tool to facilitate discussion

27
Section 47
CAF
GCP
Initial Assessment
Enquiries (GCP neglect)
Core Assessment (GCP parenting capacity)
Protection / Support Plan
GCP monitoring tool
28
GCP users
  • Health visitors
  • School nurses
  • Social workers
  • Family centre workers
  • Education staff

29
Why choose GCP?
  • Child focused
  • User friendly
  • Common language
  • Promotes partnership

30
Why choose GCP?
  • Evaluates strengths as well as weaknesses
  • Allows progress to be assessed
  • A relatively objective measure
  • Allows help to be targeted where needed

31
Domains of Care
Stimulation Approval Disapproval Acceptance
Sensitivity Responsivity Reciprocity Overtures
Self actualisation
Esteem
Love and belongingness
Present absent
Safety
Physical needs
Nutrition. Housing, Clothing, Hygiene Health
Maslow, A. 1954
32
What to observe
Nutrition Housing Clothing Hygiene Health
Quality, Quantity, Preparation, Organisation,
A. PHYSICAL B. SAFETY C. LOVE D. ESTEEM
33
Grades of Care
Grade 1 Grade 2 Grade 3 Grade 4 Grade 5
Level of care All childs needs met Essential needs fully met Some essential needs met Most essential needs unmet Essential needs entirely unmet/hostile
Commitment to care Child first Child priority Child/carer at par Child second Child not considered
Quality of care Best Adequate Equivocal Poor Worst
34
Scoring
  • Rating 1 5
  • Use on every child in the family
  • Use with different carers
  • Complete with the parent/carer
  • Use information, observation, records

35
Scoring
  • Score as actually fits the manual
  • DO NOT JUSTIFY BY REASONS
  • If there is a score of 4 or 5, this overrides any
    other scores
  • Scores between 1 and 3, record the one which
    crops up most
  • If there is an even split, the highest score is
    entered

36
Scoring
  • Complete the full reference scheme
  • Transpose to the record sheet

37
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38
Scoring
  • Complete the full reference scheme
  • Transpose to the record sheet

39
Sub-Area Scores Scores Scores Scores Scores Area Score Comments
(A) Physical 1. NUTRITION 1 2 3 4 5
(A) Physical 2. HOUSING 1 2 3 4 5
(A) Physical 3. CLOTHING 1 2 3 4 5
(A) Physical 4. HYGIENE 1 2 3 4 5
(A) Physical 5. HEALTH 1 2 3 4 5
(B) Safety 1. IN CARERS PRESENCE 1 2 3 4 5
(B) Safety 2. IN CARERS ABSENCE 1 2 3 4 5
(C) Love 1. CARER 1 2 3 4 5
(C) Love 2. MUTUAL ENGAGEMENT 1 2 3 4 5
(D) Esteem 1. STIMULATION 1 2 3 4 5
(D) Esteem 2. APPROVAL 1 2 3 4 5
(D) Esteem 3. DISAPPROVAL 1 2 3 4 5
(D) Esteem 4. ACCEPTANCE 1 2 3 4 5
40
A
AREAS
?
Reference Sheet
Sub-areas
1
?
Items
a
b
c
d
1
3
2
3
2
?
c
a
b
2
4
2
3
?
c
a
b
2
2
2
4
3
5
?
d
a
b
c
3
3
2
2
41
Scoring
  • Score as actually fits the manual
  • DO NOT JUSTIFY BY REASONS
  • If there is a score of 4 or 5, this overrides any
    other scores
  • Between 1 and 3, when there are more of one
    score, record the one with the most
  • If there is an even split, the highest score is
    entered

42
A
AREAS
Reference Sheet
Sub-areas
1
Items
a
b
c
d
1
3
2
3
2
c
a
b
2
4
2
3
c
a
b
2
2
2
4
3
5
d
a
b
c
3
3
2
2
43
A
AREAS
4
Reference Sheet
Sub-areas
1
3
Items
a
b
c
d
1
3
2
3
2
4
c
a
b
2
4
2
3
2
c
a
b
2
2
2
4
3
5
3
d
a
b
c
3
3
2
2
44
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45
Targeting Items of Care
Targeted Areas Current Score Target Score Timescale Reviewed Score
1
2
3
4
5
46
Assessing progress
47
Unique Advantages
  • Common language, common reference
  • Objective measure child focussed
  • Effective tool to promote partnership assessments
    and planning with parents
  • User friendly
  • Comprehensively covers all areas of care
  • Child and carer specific

48
Assessment Pitfalls
  • Parents behaviour, whether co-operative or
    uncooperative, often misinterpreted
  • Information from family friends and neighbours
    undervalued
  • Coping with aggressive or frightening families
  • Failure to give sufficient weight to relevant
    case history Start again syndrome
  • Not enough attention is paid to what children
    say, how they look and how they behave
    maintenance of a wholly child-centred approach

49
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)

50
Information handling pitfalls
  • Picking out the important from a mass of data
  • Facts recorded faithfully but not always
    critically appraised
  • Too trusting/insufficiently critical
  • 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

51
Assessment pitfalls
  • Rule of optimism
  • Natural love
  • Cultural relativism
  • Too much
  • not enough
  • Adult services and childrens services
    (hand-in-hand or hand-to-hand?)

52
Childrens services and adult services
  • Working on the same case but not working jointly
  • Mutual incomprehension and misunderstanding
  • False expectations and assumptions
  • Abdicating responsibility
  • Need for interpreters

53
Information handling pitfalls
  • Keeping your head down
  • Hesitancy to challenge other professionals or the
    conventional wisdom
  • Tendency to move from facts to actions without
    showing your working

54
Challenge your dodgy thinking
  • I am only a and he is a, so I had better keep
    my opinion to myself.
  • I am obviously in a minority, so I had better
    keep my opinion to myself.
  • We need to maintain harmonious relations, so I
    had better keep my opinion to myself.

55
A final thought
  • We are guilty of many errors and many faults
    but the worst of our crimes is abandoning our
    children, neglecting the fountain of life. Many
    of the things we need can wait. The child cannot.
    Right now is the time his bones are being formed,
    his blood is being made, and his senses are being
    developed. To him we cannot answer 'Tomorrow.'
    His name is 'Today.'
  • Gabriela Mistral (Chilean poet, 1889-1957)
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