Evidence – Informed Practice, Practice – Informed Research

Celebrating 25 years of BASPCAN’s Journal

‘Child Abuse Review’

Royal Angus Hotel, Birmingham

Friday 18 November 2016

 

 

25th anniversary issue 1 coverAs one of the editors of Child Abuse Review, I would really like to invite you to join us on the 18th November in Birmingham for our 25th Anniversary conference. It promises to be an exciting and challenging programme, with some great guest speakers and inspiring free papers.

 

 

 

 

The day will include:

An optional pre-conference breakfast meeting for delegates on how to get published in Child Abuse Review

 

An opening plenary session setting the theme, with four parallel sessions on the themes:

  • Child Sexual Exploitation and Sexual Abuse
  • Domestic Violence and Parenting Issues
  • Translating Research into Practice
  • Neglect

Each parallel session will include a keynote lecture, a number of short presentations from submitted abstracts, and a plenary discussion.

Interactive poster presentations will be held at morning coffee and lunchtime. The posters will be up for viewing all day from 9am until 4.30pm

A closing plenary and celebration of 25 years of Child Abuse Review.

 

Book online at http://www.baspcan.org.uk/booking.php

 

To see the full programme, click here

4-page-programme-25th-anniversary-flier

 

 

Thinking Outside the Box

I am really excited about the BASPCAN 10th International Congress which we will be hosting at the University of Warwick in April 2018. It may be 2 years away, but I think it promises to be one of the most inspiring and creative conferences on child protection ever!

Have a look at this brief video which introduces the congress (photos courtesy of Motionhouse, one of our congress partners)

Thinking Outside the Box

We will be continually updating this information over the next few months: to register your interest and receive the latest updates as they become available, please email conferences@baspcan.org.uk  with your email address and the header ‘Congress 2018 Updates’.

Good news for parents with young babies

The number of unexplained infant deaths in England has fallen to its lowest ever level with just 212 babies dying of SIDS/unascertained causes in England in 2014 compared to 252 the year before[1].

SIDS 2014

 

This continues a steady downward trend in the SIDS death rates since the dramatic falls in the early 1990s. To lose a baby suddenly and unexpectedly is one of the worst possible fears of many parents, so the fact that the numbers are continuing to decline is really positive news.

 

Preventable Infant Deaths

SIDS 2014 maternal age 2However, for over 200 families to go through this experience each year is still a real tragedy, particularly as many of these deaths are preventable. The data from the Office for National Statistics show that the risks remain particularly high for young mothers, for those without a stable partner, and for those in manual or routine occupations. These are some of the most vulnerable families in our society.

We know what is needed to prevent most of these deaths. Perhaps the biggest impact on the declining SIDS rates has been the continued decline in the number of women smoking during pregnancy, now (2015-16) running at just over 10%, compared to 15.1% in 2006-7.[2]

Data from our 2003-6 study in SW England showed that 57% of mothers whose babies died in infancy smoked during pregnancy compared to just 14% of the random controls.[3] If we can continue to reduce both smoking during pregnancy and postnatal exposure of infants to parental smoking, we could reduce the rates even further.

Spreading the messages about safe sleeping, and helping parents, particularly those in the most vulnerable groups, to follow those messages will also help.

 

Little Lullaby

To help these parents, the Lullaby Trust launched Little Lullaby earlier this year – little_lullaby_logo_sma tremendous resource for young parents. I’d encourage you to have a look and pass the link on to any young parents you know.

 

Little Lullaby is a social network for young parents providing them with a space where they can learn about safer sleep, while also gaining support from their peers through the ups and downs of pregnancy and parenthood

 

 

References

[1] https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/deaths/bulletins/unexplaineddeathsininfancyenglandandwales/2014

[2] http://digital.nhs.uk/article/2021/Website-Search?productid=21116&q=number+of+mothers+smoking+during+pregnancy&sort=Relevance&size=10&page=1&area=both#top

[3] Blair PS, Sidebotham P, Evason-Coombe C, Edmonds M, Heckstall-Smith EM, Fleming P. Hazardous cosleeping environments and risk factors amenable to change: case-control study of SIDS in south west England. BMJ 2009; 339: b3666.  doi:10.1136/bmj.b3666

 

Parental mental health problems and child protection

Our recent triennial review of Serious Case Reviews found a high proportion (53%) of parents whose children died or were seriously harmed through abuse and neglect had mental health problems. This finding is in keeping with other research from the UK and elsewhere which has shown links between parental mental ill-health and child maltreatment.

This, however, presents us with a dilemma: while the prevalence of parental mental ill-health in this population (parents of children seriously or fatally harmed through abuse and neglect) is high, and undoubtedly higher than in the general population, the numbers are small (31 per year) in comparison to the overall numbers of adults with mental illnesses. So, for example, the UK Biobank study, which assessed 172,751 adults from 2009-10, found that 27% met criteria for a mood disorder (major depression or bipolar disorder)[1]; extrapolating this to the 13,887,000 parents with dependent children living in the UK[2], suggests that there will be at least 3.7 million parents with a current or previous mood disorder. If you extend that to include lower levels of anxiety, depression, and other mental health problems, the numbers are likely to be even higher.

So while it may be true to say that children who suffer severe or fatal child maltreatment have a high likelihood of having a parent with a mental health problem, it does not follow that any parent with a mental health problem is likely to abuse his or her child.

 

Hence the dilemma. Parents with mental health problems need care and support, including support around managing their mental ill-health and support in their parenting. This will not be helped by taking a stigmatising approach, nor by assuming they are not able to effectively parent their children. The vast majority of parents with mental health parents are undoubtedly good parents who love and care for their children. Nevertheless, there will be some for whom the nature or severity of their mental health problems, or the interaction between their mental health problems and other factors, do affect their ability to care for their children.

Our research identified the co-existence of parental mental ill-health with domestic violence, with substance misuse, with social isolation, or with criminal activity all as contributing to presenting risks to children. In particular, the presence of domestic violence, when combined with mental health problems in either parent, may increase the risk to the child, even (and perhaps especially) after separation. Likewise, there may be indicators in the nature or severity of the mental illness itself. So, those parents with a history of attempted suicide, or with delusional thoughts, or who had expressed some intent to harm the child may pose a distinct risk.

So the message of these Serious Case Reviews is not to label all parents with mental health problems as potential child abusers, but rather to consider what impact their mental health may be having on the child, to work with the parent to fully explore any additional risks, and to offer respectful, supportive care for the parent and the child.

Learning to respond appropriately to parents with mental health problems is a challenge for professionals. In our research report we consider some of the implications of this and how we can facilitate better quality child- and family-oriented care. In our journal, Child Abuse Review, we have recently compiled a virtual issue bringing together a number of papers from 1999-2014 which explore some of these issues in greater depth. All of these papers are freely available online for a limited period on the journal website: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1002/(ISSN)1099-0852

Contents The articles below are freely available online until 31 August 2016.

The mental health problems of mothers experiencing the child protection system: identifying needs and appropriate responses (Volume 8, Issue 1, 1999) Nicky Stanley and Bridget Penhale

Parental mental health as a child protection issue: data from the NSPCC national child protection helpline (Volume 8, Issue 3, 1999) Vanessa Lewis and Susan J. Creighton

Building bridges: the interface between adult mental health and child protection (Volume 8, Issue 3, 1999) Charmian Tye and Gretchen Precey

Parental mental health and child protection — making the links through training (Volume 12, Issue 2, 2003) Jennifer Pearce

The experiences of children living with and caring for parents with mental illness (Volume 15, Issue 2, 2006) Jo Aldridge

The mental health of mothers of physically abused children: the relationship with children’s behavioural problems — report from Japan (Volume 15, Issue 3, 2006) Tsuneo Takei, Hiroshi Yamashita and Keiko Yoshida

Maternal mental health and faltering growth in infants (Volume 16, Issue 5, 2007) Laura Dunne, Helga Sneddon, Dorota Iwaniec and Moira C. Stewart

Championing the interface between mental health and child protection: evaluation of a service initiative to improve joint working in Northern Ireland (Volume 21, Issue 3, 2012 Gavin Davidson, Joe Duffy, Liz Barry, Patsy Curry, Eithne Darragh and Judith Lees

Making Decisions about Parental Mental Health: An Exploratory Study of Community Mental Health Team Staff (Volume 21, Issue 3, 2012) Khadj Rouf, Michael Larkin and Geoff Lowe

 

 

[1] Smith DJ, Nicholl BI, Cullen B, Martin D, Ul-Haq Z, Evans J, et al. (2013) Prevalence and Characteristics of Probable Major Depression and Bipolar Disorder within UK Biobank: Cross-Sectional Study of 172,751 Participants. PLoS ONE 8(11): e75362. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0075362

 

[2] http://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/families/bulletins/familiesandhouseholds/2015-11-05#families

Adolescent harm from abuse and neglect

New research from the University of Warwick reveals an increase in the number of adolescents who died or were seriously harmed as a result of abuse or neglect.

The research was commissioned by the Department for Education and is based on an analysis of 293 serious case reviews (SCRs) carried out in England between 2011-2014.

Serious Case Reviews

The research was led by Dr Peter Sidebotham, Associate Professor of Child Health of Warwick Medical School and Professor Marian Brandon, Professor of Social Work and Director of the University of East Anglia’s Centre for Research on Children and Families of the University of East Anglia.

The study Pathways to Harm, Pathways to Protection: A Triennial Analysis of Serious Case Reviews 2011-2014 is the fifth consecutive analysis of serious case reviews in England undertaken by the same research team dating back to reviews from 2003-2005. A serious case review (SCR) takes place after a child dies or is seriously injured and abuse or neglect is thought to be involved. It looks at lessons that can help prevent similar incidents from happening in the future

Adolescents

Their research showed a small but significant increase in fatalities and non-fatalities among two age groups 11-15 year olds and 16-17 year olds. In the current review 28% of SCRs were within the two older age groups compared to previous years when the figure was 22-25%.

Dr Sidebotham said: “Often people don’t associate abuse and neglect with adolescents and most cases involve infants and younger children, but people don’t recognise that there is a second peak in risk during adolescence.

“The increase in SCRs involving adolescents is a worrying trend. By adolescence the impact of long-standing abuse or neglect may be present in behaviours which place the young person at increased risk of harm.”

Professor Marian Brandon commented: “We found that the vulnerability of adolescents was often overlooked because they were considered to be already adult or thought to be resilient when taking time to listen to them or to understand their behaviour would have revealed the extent of their difficulties. This was often the case with the young people who were sexually exploited and also of many of the young people who took their own lives”

Drug and alcohol misuse

The research highlighted that almost two thirds of the young people aged 11-15 and 88% of the older adolescents had mental health problems. Some responded to adversity by engaging in risk-taking behaviour including drug and alcohol misuse and offending. Others were placed at risk of sexual exploitation.

Dr Sidebotham added: “This group of adolescents may find themselves particularly vulnerable to online grooming. On a positive note we found that being at school can promote good overall development and a buffer against adversities. Children not regularly in school due to poor attendance, home schooling or exclusion can be vulnerable due to their ‘invisibility’ and social isolation.”

The research has been reported in Science Daily and other online news sources.

The full report and other resources are available on the Research in Practice Serious Case Review website

Continuity and change in child protection: challenges in research and practice

 

I am pleased to announce that the latest issue of Child Abuse Review is now published and available online. Six research papers and a freely accessible editorial focus on continuity and change in child protection.

Last year’s special issue on domestic abuse and safeguarding children generated an unprecedented number of submissions to the journal. This emphasises just how crucial the issue is for children’s safety and wellbeing. In their editorial for that issue, Cathy Humphreys and Caroline Bradbury-Jones identified seven key principles in relation to safeguarding and domestic abuse, relating to focus, response and intervention (Humphreys and Bradbury-Jones 2015). In this issue of Child Abuse Review we pick up on those, with two papers exploring interventions with violent fathers, drawing on Humphreys and Bradbury-Jones’ assertion that risk assessment and risk management of the perpetrator should be a focus of intervention.

 

To reduce the prevalence and impact of domestic violence, we need to engage both with those affected by it (the women and children) and with the perpetrators

 

We include two papers which consider some specific vulnerable situations for young people: those who run away or go missing from home; and those who are involved in gang membership. They present some challenging and perhaps surprising results. We include an analysis of national data on under 5 mortality rates in the former Soviet Union, and a nationwide survey of teams providing medical evaluations for possible sexual abuse in the USA.

 

Young people consistently cited family difficulties as the main issue influencing their decision to run away from home, including difficulties in parental that management of their child’s behaviour, and significant family stresses. They also identified problems at school and the young person’s own emotional health as key underlying factors.

 

Young people who go missing want to be heard, to be treated with respect, to be able to exercise autonomy, and to feel that someone cares (Taylor, Bradbury-Jones et al. 2014).

 

Read the full editorial here.

 

List of Contents

Gray      “I’m working towards getting back together”: Client accounts of motivation related to relationship status in men’s behaviour change programmes in New South Wales, Australia

McConnell and Taylor Evaluating programmes for violent fathers: challenges and ethical review

Hill ‘No-one runs away for no reason’ Understanding safeguarding issues when children and young people go missing from home

Cepeda et al Childhood Trauma among Mexican-American Gang Members and Delinquent Youth: A Comparative Exploratory Study

Pritchard and Mirza Under-fives Child Mortality and Child-Abuse-Related-Deaths in the former USSR: Is there an under-reporting of abuse related deaths?

Greeley et al A Nationwide Survey of Peer-Review Practices on Child Maltreatment Teams

 

Book reviews: Critical Perspectives on Child Sexual Exploitation and Related Trafficking edited by M. Melrose and J. Pearce; Child Maltreatment and High Risk Families by J. Taylor and A. Lazenbatt; Safeguarding and Protecting children, Young People and families: A Guide for Nurses and Midwives by Gill Watson and Sandra Rodwell

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

References

Humphreys, C. and C. Bradbury-Jones (2015). “Domestic Abuse and Safeguarding Children: Focus, Response and Intervention.” Child Abuse Review 24(4): 231-234.

Taylor, J., C. Bradbury-Jones, H. Hunter, K. Sanford, T. Rahilly and N. Ibrahim (2014). “Young People’s Experiences of Going Missing From Care: A Qualitative Investigation using Peer Researchers.” Child Abuse Review 23(6): 387-401.

 

Pathways to harm, pathways to protection: a triennial review of Serious Case Reviews

 

 

Our long-awaited triennial review of Serious Case Reviews has now been published by the Department for Education and is available, along with a number of other resources, on the Research in Practice SCR website.

Over the past year Professor Marian Brandon from University of East Anglia and I have been working with a small team of researchers to review all 293 Serious Case Reviews undertaken by Local Safeguarding Children Boards between 2011 and 2014.

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A Serious Case Review is a local enquiry carried out where a child has died or been seriously harmed and abuse or neglect are known or suspected, and there is cause for concern about professional working together. This study is the fifth consecutive analysis of Serious Case Reviews in England undertaken by our research teams dating back to reviews from 2003-2005, and represents one of the largest national analyses of serious and fatal child abuse and neglect anywhere in the world.

I have been really inspired by this research which I feel gives us some extremely helpful insights into the nature of severe child maltreatment and what we – as professionals and as a society can do to help prevent it and to intervene where appropriate to protect children and support families.

 

No increase in child maltreatment fatalities in spite of huge increases in child protection activity

The data demonstrate that there has been an increase in the number of Serious Case Reviews carried out since 2012. However, this does not reflect any increase in actual numbers of fatal cases and is set against a backdrop of a steady year-on-year increase in child protection activity. There has been no change in the number of child deaths linked directly to maltreatment and a reduction in the fatality rates for all but the older adolescent age group.

 

Serious case reviews 2005-14:

fatal and non-fatal cases by year

number of SCRs barchart

 

The research found an average of 66 deaths per year fatality rates by agein all age groups, compared to 73 deaths per year in the previous study from 2009-2011. Fatality rates had fallen from 4.67 to 3.78 per 100,000 in infants, but had risen from 0.31 to 0.65 per 100,000 in those aged 16-17. In the same time period, the numbers of referrals to children’s services in this country had risen from 609,000 per year to 619,000 per year.

 

 

 Children falling below the threshold

As we explored these data in detail, it became clear that only a small proportion of those children suffering severe or fatal abuse and neglect were subject to child protection plans at the time of their death or serious injury (just 12%). However, over two thirds were or had been known to children’s social care at some point prior to the incident. These findings, along with our detailed qualitative analysis, suggest that once children cross the threshold for child protection services, they tend to be well protected, and that we have good child protection systems in place for managing some of these complex cases. However, there are large numbers of children and families who simply do not meet those thresholds, yet nevertheless are vulnerable.

 

“Throughout our review, we encountered examples of creative and effective child safeguarding. Examples of poor practice were also identified, involving failure to follow guidelines; an absence of safeguarding systems; barriers to effective co-working; or failure to recognise or act upon safeguarding opportunities. These apparent failures, however, need to be seen in the light of the effective safeguarding work that takes place across the country on a daily basis.

For many of these children, the harms they suffered occurred not because of, but in spite of, all the work that professionals were doing to support and protect them.”

Characteristics of the children and families

In keeping with previous research, we found that most, but not all, serious and fatal child maltreatment takes place within the family with children living at home or with relatives.

Babies and young children are inherently vulnerable and dependent, and features which mark them out as especially fragile place them at higher risk of abuse and neglect. However, there is a second peak in adolescence. By adolescence the impact of long-standing abuse or neglect may present in behaviours which place the young person at increased risk of harm. Almost two thirds of the young people aged 11-15, and 88% of the older adolescents, had mental health problems. Some young people responded to adversity by engaging in risk-taking behaviour including drug and alcohol misuse and offending. Others are placed at risk through sexual exploitation.

 

“We found that the vulnerability of adolescents was often overlooked because they were considered to be already adult or thought to be resilient, when taking time to listen to them or to understand their behaviour would have revealed the extent of their difficulties. This was often the case with the young people who were sexually exploited and also with many of the young people who took their own lives”

 

Cumulative risk of harm

One of the most important findings in our research has been the cumulative risk of harm to a child when different parental and environmental risk factors are present in combination or over periods of time. This particularly relates to domestic abuse, parental mental ill-health, and alcohol or substance misuse, but it also includes other risks such as adverse experiences in the parents’ own childhoods, a history of violent crime, a pattern of multiple consecutive partners, acrimonious separation, and social isolation.

 

Cumulative risk of harm:

the number of families experiencing multiple problems

cumulative risk venn diagram

Implications for practitioners

The primary aim of a Serious Case Review is to learn lessons in order to improve inter-agency working to protect children. In this research, we were able to identify a wide range of lessons for practitioners in different agencies, for managers and policy makers, and for our wider society. A lot of these revolve around learning to listen: to children and to families, and to other practitioners. The research has emphasised the importance of safe and trusting environments for children to be seen individually, speak freely, and be listened to; of treating parents with openness and respect; and for moving from incident or episodic service provision to a culture of long-term and continuous support, recognising that many of these situations are complex and ongoing.

 

“Adolescents may struggle to express their needs or feelings, or to engage effectively with services, and there are dangers of older adolescents falling between child and adult services. Importantly, children and young people may demonstrate ‘silent’ ways of telling about abuse and neglect through verbal and non-verbal emotional and behavioural changes and outbursts.”

 

We have, in conjunction with Research in Practice, produced a series of practitioner briefings for different professional groups, including health professionals, education, social services and police.

These are available, along with an introductory video, the full report, and a number of other resources on the Research in Practice Serious Case Reviews website:

http://seriouscasereviews.rip.org.uk/

 

Marian Brandon and I will be discussing some of the key findings of the research in a webinar this Thursday from 12.00-13.00. To register for the webinar, click here. Places are limited, so book early.

 

Over the next few weeks, I will be posting more blogs highlighting some of the different findings from our research. To keep up to date with these, and with my other blogs, click on the link below: ‘notify me of new posts by email’.

 

Learning from Serious Case Reviews

Between 2011 and 2014, 293 Serious Case Reviews were carried out in England into cases where children had died or been seriously harmed through abuse and neglect. Professor Marian Brandon and I, together with our research teams from the Universities of East Anglia and Warwick have spent the past year analysing these reviews to see what we can learn about improving our systems for protecting children and promoting their safety and wellbeing.

The research report is due to be published by the Department for Education on Tuesday 5th July and we will be following this by a webinar on Thursday 7th July from 12-1 in which Marian and I will be discussing some of the key learning coming from this research.

Anyone is welcome to register for the webinar, which is being hosted by Research in Practice, who will also be a repository for the full research report and a series of practice briefings for different groups of professionals.

To register for the webinar, click here.

I will be posting our press release on my blog on the 5th July, and over the next few months will post further blogs picking out some of the important learning from this review. To keep up to date with this, do sign up for email notifications below.