What role for the general practitioner in child protection?
What role for the general practitioner in child protection?
Background: New government guidance on cooperation in child protection confirms the importance of the general practitioner (GP) contribution. While research highlights the concerns of others about their role in the multi-agency process, relatively little is known about the views and experiences of GPs themselves.
Aim: To examine the understanding that each of the key professional groups had of its own and each other's roles in child protection to identify those factors seen to enhance or inhibit the effective performance of these roles.
Method: The research formed part of a larger investigation of the role of health professionals in child protection, which combined case study investigations of child protection networks in three health authority sites with a regional survey of Area Child Protection Committee members.
Results: A lack of correspondence was identified between GPs' perception and performance of their role in child protection and the expectations placed upon them by other child protection professionals and government guidance.
Conclusion: The study identifies the need for more explicit discussion of the nature and extent of the GP role in local interagency child protection networks.
child protection, general practitioners, interagency networks
977-981
Lupton, Carol
d5d40d22-8dea-48d1-90a2-dc3ae7ed6fff
North, Nancy
558cea73-59fc-47ad-8644-5603cf816397
Khan, Parves
bd46ee3e-f0f9-4ce5-8324-7b422bf17942
2000
Lupton, Carol
d5d40d22-8dea-48d1-90a2-dc3ae7ed6fff
North, Nancy
558cea73-59fc-47ad-8644-5603cf816397
Khan, Parves
bd46ee3e-f0f9-4ce5-8324-7b422bf17942
Lupton, Carol, North, Nancy and Khan, Parves
(2000)
What role for the general practitioner in child protection?
British Journal of General Practice, 50 (461), .
Abstract
Background: New government guidance on cooperation in child protection confirms the importance of the general practitioner (GP) contribution. While research highlights the concerns of others about their role in the multi-agency process, relatively little is known about the views and experiences of GPs themselves.
Aim: To examine the understanding that each of the key professional groups had of its own and each other's roles in child protection to identify those factors seen to enhance or inhibit the effective performance of these roles.
Method: The research formed part of a larger investigation of the role of health professionals in child protection, which combined case study investigations of child protection networks in three health authority sites with a regional survey of Area Child Protection Committee members.
Results: A lack of correspondence was identified between GPs' perception and performance of their role in child protection and the expectations placed upon them by other child protection professionals and government guidance.
Conclusion: The study identifies the need for more explicit discussion of the nature and extent of the GP role in local interagency child protection networks.
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Published date: 2000
Keywords:
child protection, general practitioners, interagency networks
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 33613
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/33613
ISSN: 0960-1643
PURE UUID: 2ff8954e-57c0-4c8d-8b8c-739599621621
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Date deposited: 20 Jul 2006
Last modified: 08 Jan 2022 06:54
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Contributors
Author:
Carol Lupton
Author:
Nancy North
Author:
Parves Khan
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