Developing innovative models of practice at the interface between the NHS and child and family social work where children living at home are at risk of abuse and neglect: a scoping review
Developing innovative models of practice at the interface between the NHS and child and family social work where children living at home are at risk of abuse and neglect: a scoping review
The case has been made for introducing a rights-based, public health approach to child protection in England. A continuum of prevention is proposed, with multi-agency responses calibrated more carefully to the level of risk identified by children, parents and practitioners. The aim was to allocate inter-professional authority and resources in such a way as to ensure the safeguarding response is proportionate to the nature and level of concerns expressed and reliable in achieving good outcoSmes for children and parents alike. Recent research findings confirm the need for new models of service alignment and inter-professional responsibility at the interface of ‘primary’ and ‘specialist’ health-care services and ‘children's social care’, where significant safeguarding concerns are raised. This paper reports the findings of a scoping study, designed to establish the extent to which innovative practice methodologies have been implemented and evaluated in England to date. While the evidence to support the effectiveness of specific practice methodologies and contrasting logics of service design and implementation is shown to be very limited still, achieving reliability and legitimacy in the safeguarding relationships established at the service interface seems to depend on the integrity of the dialogue facilitated in each case.
health, innovation, safeguarding, social work
62-69
Luckock, Barry
c0b1ad93-adb3-4d9e-937e-40b8624f2190
Barlow, Jane
8e2c60a7-5ffc-4aad-9fd6-4257cc0c55cc
Brown, Chris
42bbe788-54bf-4081-8c18-ead8b554f0fd
1 March 2017
Luckock, Barry
c0b1ad93-adb3-4d9e-937e-40b8624f2190
Barlow, Jane
8e2c60a7-5ffc-4aad-9fd6-4257cc0c55cc
Brown, Chris
42bbe788-54bf-4081-8c18-ead8b554f0fd
Luckock, Barry, Barlow, Jane and Brown, Chris
(2017)
Developing innovative models of practice at the interface between the NHS and child and family social work where children living at home are at risk of abuse and neglect: a scoping review.
Child and Family Social Work, 22, .
(doi:10.1111/cfs.12228).
Abstract
The case has been made for introducing a rights-based, public health approach to child protection in England. A continuum of prevention is proposed, with multi-agency responses calibrated more carefully to the level of risk identified by children, parents and practitioners. The aim was to allocate inter-professional authority and resources in such a way as to ensure the safeguarding response is proportionate to the nature and level of concerns expressed and reliable in achieving good outcoSmes for children and parents alike. Recent research findings confirm the need for new models of service alignment and inter-professional responsibility at the interface of ‘primary’ and ‘specialist’ health-care services and ‘children's social care’, where significant safeguarding concerns are raised. This paper reports the findings of a scoping study, designed to establish the extent to which innovative practice methodologies have been implemented and evaluated in England to date. While the evidence to support the effectiveness of specific practice methodologies and contrasting logics of service design and implementation is shown to be very limited still, achieving reliability and legitimacy in the safeguarding relationships established at the service interface seems to depend on the integrity of the dialogue facilitated in each case.
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Published date: 1 March 2017
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Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Keywords:
health, innovation, safeguarding, social work
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Local EPrints ID: 494178
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494178
ISSN: 1356-7500
PURE UUID: 999851a8-9675-42b8-8779-b113f1c7a8ab
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Date deposited: 26 Sep 2024 16:49
Last modified: 01 Oct 2024 02:11
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Author:
Barry Luckock
Author:
Jane Barlow
Author:
Chris Brown
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