Assessing parental capacity

21
Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children Presentation P12 P12 Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children Presentation Assessing parental capacity What I need people to think about

description

Assessing parental capacity. What I need people to think about. Learning outcomes. To assess parents’ capacity to respond to a child’s needs. Keep the child at the centre. Any assessment of the parenting capacity has to keep a firm focus on the direct experience of the child. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Assessing parental capacity

Page 1: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12P12Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation

Assessing parental capacityWhat I need people to think about

Page 2: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 2

Learning outcomes• To assess parents’ capacity to respond to a

child’s needs

Page 3: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 3

Keep the child at the centre• Any assessment of the parenting capacity has

to keep a firm focus on the direct experience of the child.

Page 4: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 4

Understanding the impact of parental problems• Problems that affect parenting capacity are

frequently not addressed or understood.• Unless the root problems affecting parenting

capacity are assessed and addressed, children are likely to continue to experience chronic neglect.

Page 5: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 5

What children need from people who look after them• Everyday care and help.

• Keeping me safe.

• Being there for me.

• Play, encouragement and fun.

• Guidance, supporting me to make the right choices.

• Knowing what is going to happen and when.

• Understanding my family’s background and beliefs.

Page 6: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 6

What the child needs from their wider world• Support from family, friends and other people.

• School.

• Enough money.

• Work opportunities for my family.

• Local resources.

• Comfortable and safe housing.

• Belonging.

Page 7: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 7

Start with engagement with parents• The task is to empathise and work with parents

(wherever possible) while retaining a focus on the child and their welfare.

• Specific challenges will include: • how to be honest and clear with parents without creating

hostility;• how to be empathic without colluding with unacceptable

behaviour;• how to reconcile the different imperatives of the role within

practice with parents.(Forrester et.al. 2008, p24)

Page 8: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 8

What do parents tell us?They want workers who are:

• courteous• turn up on time• speak directly to them• don’t use jargon• ‘listen and ‘really hear’ and accept what is being said• explain what is happening and why• do what they say they are going to do and don’t over-promise• say honestly when they can’t help• Aae patient and make enough time to understand.

Source: Teaching and learning communication skills in social work – SCIE 2004 Guide 5

Page 9: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 9

Barriers to engagement• Parents may have fears that their children will be

removed from their care (or not returned if already removed) .

• They may deliberately avoid contact with professionals – physically or emotionally.

• They may appear to be co-operating with professionals whilst not really accepting the concerns about neglect.

• Their lives may be fraught with a series of crises that deflect from sustained attention to the assessment process.

Page 10: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 10

Theoretical frameworkAssessment must be both chronological and ecological – a snapshot and a movie.

Parent history and parent/child history

Key transition

Key transition

Current circumstances

Page 11: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 11

Plan for assessment• Assess the factors affecting parenting capacity.

• Chronology and past history and patterns within cases.

• Parents current ability to form a range of healthy relationships as indicated by:• balance of attention to children's needs and own needs• awareness of effects of relationships• ability to take responsibility for behaviour• meeting the child’s needs.

Page 12: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 12

Importance of past history• Definitions of a chronology include:

‘A list in date order of all the major changes and events in a person’s life.’‘A chronology seeks to provide a clear account of all significant events in a child’s life to date, drawing upon the knowledge and information held by agencies involved with the child and family.’‘The purpose of a chronology is early indications of emerging patterns of concern.’

(Social Work Inspection Agency 2010)

Page 13: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 13

Importance of past history• Compiling a chronology:

• decide on purpose• identify key elements to be recorded• make sure information is accurate and in date order• take account of adult’s perspective

• Core elements of a chronology:• key dates: births, life events, moves• key facts• life changes, transitions• brief note of events and actions taken.

(Social Work Inspection Agency 2010)

Page 14: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 14

Assess capacity to change• Parent’s willingness to accept responsibility for

aspects of their problem over which they have some control.

• Parent’s ability to change, linked with child’s developmental needs and timescales, and extent to which compromised .

• Parent’s willingness to change.

Page 15: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 15

Assessing impact of parental problems• In many cases of neglect, parents are affected by:

• domestic abuse• mental health problems• substance misuse• learning disabilities• or a combination of the above.

• There needs to be in-depth assessments of the specific ways in which these parental problems are affecting parenting capacity.

Page 16: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 16

What would help?• The planned interventions should take account of an

analysis of the reason for the continuation of parental problems.• Does there need to be therapeutic help for underlying

emotional distress?• Is specialist treatment required? Of what type and by

whom?• Is support required to develop a range of healthy

relationships? • Does the mother need help to separate from a violent

partner?

Page 17: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 17

Impact of wider family factors• If isolated from extended family:

• may be a deliberate protective strategy;• may be due to difficulties with attachment

relationships;• may be due to distance, resources, time - for

example.

• Parents need opportunity to explore and understand these areas and the positives and negatives of re-connecting with extended family members.

Page 18: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 18

Impact of environmental factors• Assess the interaction between the wider family/family

functioning/ family history affecting parenting capacity and wider environmental factors.

• Are practical help and resources required?

• If so, in what way should they be provided and the impact of their use measured for change over time?

• What can the parent do to buffer the child from the effects of deprivation?

Page 19: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 19

‘Recognising the past in the present’• Adults will have ‘internal working models’ of

relationships formed on the basis of childhood experiences of being parented.

• Parents can unconsciously be affected by their internal working models in their interactions with their own children.

• Assessing and helping people to recognise these patterns is an important part of assessment and their planning.

Page 20: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 20

Capacity and willingness to change• Capacity to change:

• prior evidence of changes as a result of interventions;• examples of concrete improvements over time;• capacity to translate information into action.

• Willingness / motivation to change• acceptance of responsibility for own actions;• sustained changes over time;• making use or/accessing available resources and services.

Page 21: Assessing parental capacity

Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children

Presentation P12

P12 Assessing parental capacity 21

Assessing parental ‘intentions’‘There is a linguistic and conceptual dilemma between a wish and need to protect children from harm, and a reluctance to label or blame caregivers who hold a primary role and responsibility in the child's life’

(Glaser 2002)

Assessing intention:• is not necessary to determine that there is neglect;• is not necessary for a decision to start to intervene;• is essential in deciding the nature of intervention;• is essential for deciding what legal action to initiate.