Refocusing children's services: evaluation of an initial assessment process |
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Authors: | Platt |
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Affiliation: | Senior Lecturer, Division of Childhood and Family Studies, University of Northumbria at Newcastle, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK |
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Abstract: | This paper describes a small scale evaluation carried out in a social services department in England. It was concerned with the impact of a pilot initial assessment process used by social workers with children in need. The pilot was, in part, an attempt to adopt the 'refocusing' agenda of the late 1990s, and the analysis is presented within this context. The research involved quantitative examination of 47 cases, and qualitative interviews with the social worker and main carer/parent in a subsample of 10. The results suggested a high level of consumer satisfaction with the assessment/family support approach, and very little evidence that the use of broadly based assessments where there are low-key concerns about a child's safety would be a dangerous form of practice. A wholehearted commitment to refocusing children's services will, however, require attention to resourcing and management issues. |
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Keywords: | assessment child protection children in need family support refocusing social work with children |
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