Title: Safeguarding Adults
1Safeguarding Adults
- A study of the effectiveness of arrangements to
safeguard adults from abuse. - Sue Toole and Louise Lawton
2Aims of the study
- To inform the review of No secrets
- To look at arrangements for safeguarding not
prevalence - To look across councils and regulated services
3Evidence
- Councils
- Self-assessment data (all 150 councils)
- Service inspections (23 councils)
- In-depth case tracking and workshops (5 councils)
- Regulated services
- Performance against National Minimum Standards
(all 22,000 services) - Thematic probe (250 services)
- In-depth thematic inspections (94 services)
4Overall picture
- Uneven progress in developing effective
safeguarding arrangements by councils and care
services leading to - Variability in quality of support to people who
experience abuse unacceptable in human rights
context - More needs to be done to ensure people directing
their own support benefit from appropriate and
individually tailored safeguards
5Overall picture
- Variability in prevention of abuse and long term
support after abuse - Best councils active leadership and strong
partnerships but big distance between best and
worst - Councils performing well on safeguarding had more
care services performing well in their area - Care services with higher quality rating
generally were better at safeguarding people
6Looking in more detail at
- Peoples experiences of safeguarding arrangements
- Quality of support and care practice
- Checking and improving arrangements
- Local strategic work
7Peoples experiences of safeguarding arrangements
- Councils are getting information out to older and
disabled people but this does not always reach
all groups - If abuse is reported, the response is quick but
some people feel they lose control in the process - Advocacy is valued, but in short supply
8Peoples experiences of safeguarding arrangements
- Councils are providing some options to help
prevent abuse for people directing their own
support, but no council had a systematic approach
- In care services, many people did not remember
being given information about what to do if they
have concerns about abuse - 4 out of 5 people using care services felt able
to speak to manager/staff if they felt unsafe - 3 out of 5 were confident of action if they
reported a concern
9Quality of support and care practice - councils
- Unacceptable variability in gathering
information, risk assessment, protection plans,
case recording - Distinguishing safeguarding allegations from
other concerns - the best councils used broad
definitions and a number of options of approach,
depending on circumstances - Information sharing protocols generally good
difficulties in practice with GPs, hospitals,
mental health services and care providers
10Quality of support and care practice - councils
- Support to people after abuse variable a menu
of options for support is needed - People abused in residential settings need more
individual support - Patchy use of legal powers - many council staff
need better understanding of legal remedies - More staff are trained in safeguarding but the
independent sector need more access to training
on local arrangements
11Quality of support and care practice care
services
- CSCI are more likely to receive safeguarding
alerts about poor services - of regulated services meeting the National
Minimum Standard (NMS) on protection from abuse
has risen across all service types since CSCI
started regulation - Private sector services are least likely to meet
the protection standard - Thematic inspection suggests performance on
outcomes may be worse than NMS figures suggest - Most common shortfalls staff training and
implementation in practice, policy/procedure and
recruitment practice
12Quality of support and care practice care
services
- Managers of care services in better performing
councils knew more about local safeguarding
procedures - Providers policies need to dovetail with local
procedures - CRB checks are universally used, other
recruitment checks less consistently evident - 40 managers did not understand the POVA list
- Higher rated services had tended to have more
staff trained in safeguarding
13Checking and improving arrangements - councils
- 2/3 of councils are failing to monitor adequately
at a casework level - At a strategic level, levels of activity are
monitored but most councils need to improve
measures of experience and outcomes - Commissioning safe services is variable but 3
star councils have a higher of services in the
area meeting the NMS protection standard
14Checking and improving arrangements care
services
- Only 38 of managers said they had used
experience from a safeguarding incident to
improve practice - Only 16 said that they enabled people using the
service to feedback on how services could make
people feel safer - High rated services were performing better in
learning from incidents and using feedback
surveys
15Checking and improving arrangements the
regulator
- CSCI have a protocol with ADASS and ACPO to
ensure regulatory practices reduce the risk of
abuse - and a policy to differentiate complaints and
abuse allegations - Inspection work in care services now targets
services needing closer monitoring - Safeguarding is a key threshold in performance
assessments of councils - A strengthened focus on safeguarding is needed in
new regulatory frameworks
16Local strategic work - councils
- Variation in priority of safeguarding shown by
differences in resources, representation on
Safeguarding Boards, profile in commissioning
strategies and numbers of alerts - Only ½ Adult Safeguarding Boards are working well
- Most struggle to engage people using services and
other members of the public - Most are developing strategic work but
safeguarding is not a theme across all relevant
strategies - At different stages in including safeguarding in
commissioning strategies
17Conclusion - Improving the current situation
- Mixed views about changes to the law
- Most support for duty to co-operate and share
information across agencies - Most support for change in council areas where
difficulties are experienced with joint working - Regardless of changes to the law, more work to
design safeguarding into services is
essential.
18Conclusion - Key elements of prevention/ early
intervention
- People supported to exercise the right to be free
of abuse including access to advocacy - Vetted and competent workforce
- Good universal services to reduce risk of abuse
- Needs assessments and risk assessments to inform
peoples choices - Sound confidentiality and information sharing
- A range of options for support to keep safe that
can be tailored to individuals needs - Services promote safeguarding and independence
- Public awareness of the abuse of adults