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Preschool Learning Alliance National Conference

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Title: Preschool Learning Alliance National Conference


1
Pre-school Learning AllianceNational Conference
  • Friday, 23 June 2006
  • Workshop Keep me safe safeguarding children
    in early year settings
  • Christopher Cloke
  • Head of Child Protection Awareness
  • NSPCC

2
Introduction
  • Vulnerability of young children
  • Expansion of early years provision
  • Based in the community
  • Role of pre-school workers
  • Prevention

3
Working Together
  • We all share responsibility for safeguarding and
    promoting the welfare of children and young
    people. All members of the community can help to
    safeguard and promote the welfare of children and
    young people if they are mindful of their needs,
    and willing and able to act if they have concerns
    about a childs welfare.
  • (Working Together, 2006)

4
Childcare Services
  • Childcare services family and childrens
    centres, day nurseries, childminders,
    pre-schools, playgroups, and holiday and out of
    school schemes play an important part in the
    lives of large numbers of children. Many
    childcare providers have considerable experience
    of working with families were a child needs to be
    safeguarded from harm, and many local authorities
    provide, commission or sponsor specific services,
    including childminders, to work with children in
    need and their families.
  • (Working Together, 2006)

5
So what is child abuse?
6
Child abuse is
  • Physical abuse
  • Emotional abuse
  • Sexual abuse
  • Neglect
  • Bullying

7
How much child abuse is there?
  • 16 of children experienced serious child
  • maltreatment by parents.
  • Physical Abuse
  • 6 experience physical abuse.
  • Neglect
  • 6 experienced serious absence of care.
  • 5 experienced serious absence of
  • supervision.

8
How much child abuse is there? Continued
  • Emotional Abuse
  • 6 of children experience frequent and severe
  • emotional maltreatment.
  • Bullying
  • 31 experienced bullying during childhood.
  • (Child Maltreatment in the United Kingdom, NSPCC,
    2002)

9
Do people really abuse very young children?
10
Numbers placed on child protection registers
  • In 2005 - 25,900 on child protection registers in
  • England
  • 41 were under 4 years (10,400)
  • 12 were under a year old (3,000)
  • Babies and toddlers vulnerable to serious
    injuries
  • and death

11
Who abuses young children?
  • Why might they abuse young children?

12
What are the signs of child abuse?
13
Neglect
  • Physical signs to look out for
  • Being constantly hungry and sometimes stealing
    food from others
  • Being in an unkempt state frequently dirty or
    smelly
  • Loss of weight or being constantly underweight
  • Being dressed inappropriately for the weather
    conditions
  • Untreated medical conditions not being taken
    for medical treatment for illnesses or injuries

14
Neglect
  • Behavioural signs to look out for
  • Being tired all the time
  • Frequently missing school or being late
  • Failing to keep hospital or medical appointments
  • Having few friends
  • Being left alone or unsupervised on a regular
    basis
  • Compulsive stealing or scavenging, especially of
    food

15
Physical abuse
  • Physical signs to look out for
  • Injuries which the child cannot explain, or
    explains unconvincingly
  • Injuries which have not been treated or treated
    inadequately
  • Injuries on parts of the body where accidental
    injury is unlikely, such as the cheeks, chest or
    thighs
  • Bruising which reflects hand or finger marks

16
Physical abuse
  • Cigarette burns, human bite marks
  • broken bones (particularly in children under the
    age of two)
  • Scalds, especially those with upward splash marks
    where hot water has been deliberately thrown over
    the child, or tide marks rings on the childs
    arms, legs or body where the child has been made
    to sit or stand in very hot water

17
Physical abuse
  • Behavioural signs to look out for
  • A child is reluctant to have their parents
    contacted
  • Aggressive behaviour or severe temper outbursts
  • A child who runs away or shows fear of going home
  • A child who flinches when approached or touched

18
Physical abuse
  • Reluctance to get undressed for sporting or other
    activities where changing into other clothes is
    normal
  • Covering arms and legs even when hot
  • Depression or moods which are out of character
    with the childs general behaviour
  • Unnaturally compliant to parents or carers

19
Emotional abuse
  • Physical signs to look out for
  • A failure to grow or to thrive (particularly if
    the child thrives when away from home
  • Sudden speech disorders
  • Delayed development, either physical or emotional

20
Emotional abuse
  • Behavioural signs to look out for
  • Compulsive nervous behaviour such as hair
    twisting or rocking
  • An unwillingness or inability to play
  • An excessive fear of making mistakes
  • Self-harm or mutilation
  • Reluctance to have parents contacted

21
Emotional abuse
  • An excessive deference towards others, especially
    adults
  • An excessive lack of confidence
  • An excessive need for approval, attention and
    affection
  • An inability to cope with praise

22
Sexual abuse
  • Physical signs to look out for
  • Pain, itching, bruising or bleeding in the
    genital or anal areas
  • Any sexually transmitted disease
  • Recurrent genital discharge or urinary tract
    infections without apparent cause
  • Stomach pains or discomfort when the child is
    walking or sitting down

23
Sexual abuse
  • Behavioural signs to look out for
  • Sudden or unexplained changes in behaviour
  • An apparent fear of someone
  • Running away from home
  • Nightmares or bedwetting
  • Self-harm, self-mutilation or attempts at suicide
  • Abuse of drugs or other substances
  • Eating problems such as anorexia or bulimia
  • Sexualised behaviour or knowledge in young
    children

24
Sexual abuse
  • Sexual drawings or language
  • Possession of unexplained amounts of money
  • The child taking a parental role at home and
    functioning beyond their age level
  • The child not being allowed to have friends
    (particularly in adolescence)
  • Alluding to secrets which they cannot reveal
  • Telling other children or adults about the abuse

25
What influences a child telling?
  • Their stage of development
  • The language they are exposed to in formative
    years
  • Speech impairment or communication difficulty
  • Whether they have received an appropriate
    response to attempts to communicate (for example,
    if a child asks a question and is ignored she may
    do something to attract attention another way or
    might just stop asking questions)

26
Why adults dont hear
  • No one could possibly abuse a child in that way
  • The child is too young, or not clever, and
    therefore is not trustworthy
  • The child is a liar or is fantasising
  • The child is wicked and evil
  • The child is trying to get the adult into trouble
  • No one would stoop so low as to abuse a disabled
    child

27
Who do I turn to?
28
Who do I turn to?
  • What does your safeguarding policy say?
  • Tell someone you trust
  • Dont do nothing
  • NSPCC Child Protection Helpline
  • Social services/police
  • Offer support to families under stress

29
Talk til it Stops autumn 2005
  • Do something to help stop abuse. Every action
    counts
  • Mobilise society to take action to end cruelty to
    children
  • Offer children and young people the opportunity
    to engage with Full Stop
  • Offer non-specialist childcare professionals
    working with children training to help them
    recognise the signs and understand the symptoms
    of abuse, overcome barriers and act effectively

30
NSPCC/EduCare Objectives
  • To mobilise people working with children to help
    end cruelty to children by encouraging them to
    consider their awareness of child cruelty and
    their responses to it
  • To encourage people working with children to
    undertake the EduCare training
  • To understand the training and support needs of
    people who are working with children so that the
    NSPCC can work to ensure these needs are being
    met
  • To start engagement on a continuous basis with
    the professional groupings that represent or
    supervise these staff

31
207,500 copies of module 1 sent out
  • Child Protection Awareness in Health GPs,
    practise nurses, dentists, ambulance staff
  • Child Protection Awareness in Education
    addressed to the head teacher of each school to
    disseminate to teaching and other staff working
    in schools.
  • Child Protection Awareness (General) child
    minders, early years and nursery staff, community
    police, fire officers

32
Nursery/Pre-school Staff
  • 15,548 allocation of modules ones
  • 2,554 (16.4) module ones completed and module
    twos sent out
  • 678 (27) module twos completed and payment for
    modules three and four received
  • A total of 486 (72) of these have completed the
    programme and been certified

33
Feedback from Pre-school staff
  • 96.7 felt that completing EduCare had helped
    them to develop a clear understanding of child
    abuse
  • 97.6 felt that completing EduCare had helped
    them to identify their role in protecting
    children
  • 96.7 felt more confident in their ability to
    recognise child abuse
  • 93.55 felt more confident in their ability to
    take action if they suspected abuse than they did
    before they completed EduCare
  • 32.2 said that they had changed something they
    do at work as a result of having completed the
    programme

34
Reviewed pre-school child protection policy and
altered volunteer induction form to include a
signed statement that they have read, understood
and agree to abide by the policyWe are
looking into child protection policy on
allegations against staff as a separate policy
35
Uptake of Training and Support Needs Survey
  • 19,422 people completed the survey

36
Child Protection Concerns
  • 88.4 of people who completed the survey come
    into direct daily contact with children
  • 50 of these had had concerns about the safety of
    a child, or suspected that a child was
    experiencing abuse during the course of their
    work
  • The average number of children that each
    respondent had had a concern about was 5

37
Taking Action
  • The majority of people had taken action last
    time they had a concern about a child. The three
    most likely forms of action were
  • Raised concerns with a colleague within the
    organisation who has responsibility for child
    protection (21)
  • Referred concerns to social services (21)
  • Discussed the concern with colleagues to get
    their advice (20)

38
Barriers to Action
  • The main barriers or difficulties that people
    reported experiencing in deciding what to do
    about their concerns was the following
  • Being unsure as to whether abuse was taking place
    (28)
  • Being worried that if they did something it would
    have a negative impact on their relationship with
    the childs parents/carers (13.18)
  • Thinking that it might make the situation worse
    for the child if they did something (7)

39
Child Protection Policies and Procedures
  • The majority of professionals know that their
    organisation has a child protection policy
  • 40 of these however are only broadly familiar
    with it or not familiar at all

40
Training
  • The issues which respondents would most like
    to receive updates on were as follows
  • Understanding the roles and responsibilities of
    other agencies/working together
  • Understanding the legal and policy framework for
    safeguarding
  • Communicating with children and young people
    where there are child protection concerns
  • Domestic violence and child protection
  • Assessing risk where there is a child protection
    concern
  • Working with families where there is a child
    protection concern

41
Child Protection Concerns
  • Early Years Workers were the least likely to have
  • had concerns about a child (22)

42
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