Title: Passport to Services
1 RYOGENS _at_ e-gov EXPO Wednesday 20th April 2005
Philip Robson, RYOGENS Programme Chair
2Agenda
- Welcome
- RYOGENS Overview
- How Warwickshire County Council are using RYOGENS
3Background why share concerns
The lack of a joined up view of a child can lead
to tragic consequences
RYOGENS changes practice by getting practitioners
to share concerns. It makes simple use of
technology.
4(No Transcript)
5- The reasons for concern are split into three
areas - Child
- Parental Capacity
- Environment
6There are 36 reasons for concern.
7For every concern that is ticked there needs to
be some evidence input. This box is a free text
field that allows Practitioners to add as much
information as possible.
8Once the evidence has been added then the basis
for sharing the information needs to be added.
9Background meeting Government challenges
Positioning of RYOGENS National Project
10Independent Evaluation
- Easy to use
- Supported by practitioners - all areas and
agencies - Timely delivery for government agendas
- Potential to make a difference to children and
their families - Key challenges that needed to be addressed
- More consistency about what concerns are logged
- Risk of practitioners not seeking consent.
11Current RYOGENS Local Authority Partners
12Achievements
- It Works
- We have proved the Concept
- You can e-enable the sharing of information to
help children - It can adapt to a variety of settings
- Warwickshire
- Tower Hamlets
- Coventry
- Redcar and Cleveland
- West Berkshire
- It is Cost Effective
- It is a CATALYST for working together
132005/06 And the Future
- End of ODPM Funding
- Transfer of Ownership
- Lead Authority or Another Partner
- Other Suitable Public Body
- Private Sector
- New Strategic Partnership
- Using Authorities Esprit
- Deloitte
- Children Act Opportunities
- Youth Justice Opportunities
14RYOGENS 3 introduces increased security
- Sensitive areas of functionality are protected
by a step-up challenge - The challenge is in the form of password and
paired secret question/answer - There is a choice of secret questions users
provide their own secret answers - Passwords now expire and must be changed at
regular intervals
15Assessments can be completed and filed on-line.
- Electronic, forms based assessments can be
completed - One or more assessments can be organised into an
Assessment Package - The permission controlled viewing, completion,
amendment and auditing of supported assessment
items this option will guide the user through an
on-line form fill workflow - The technology is extensible further assessment
forms may be introduced e.g ICS, SAP, CAF
16Audit Chronology - All activity is recorded in
the audit history
- Chronology view provides a history of activity
around either a child or a user - Key Events highlight significant actions
within the chronology - Powerful tools provide fine-grained control over
the level of detail shown - The Child Summary brings together, by type, all
items associated with a child
17National Context
- Every Child Matters
- Children Act 2004
- A shared National Programme of Change
- Cross-Government Endorsement
- Crime Reduction
18Every Child Matters September 2003
- Identified five outcomes
- Being Healthy
- Staying Safe
- Enjoying and achieving
- Making a positive contribution
- Economic well-being
19Same Child Many Agencies
20Target for Statutory Requirements end 2008
- All Local Authorities have Childrens Trust
arrangements in place - All Local Authorities
have appointed a Director of Childrens
Services - All Local Authorities have designated
a Lead Member for Childrens Services - Youth
Inclusion and Support Panels (YISPs)
21Integrated Childrens System (ICS)
22Integrated Childrens System (ICS)
Fewer, inter-operable, systems
Universal child index
Common assessment framework
Duties to co-operate and safeguard
Federated solutions
Joint commissioning
Organisational re-design co-location
Workforce development
Childrens centres/extended schools
Process change / better practice
Regional hubs
23Lesley Celic RYOGENS Implementation Director
Warwickshire County Council How has RYOGENS
Improved Service Delivery
24RYOGENS in Warwickshire
All core contributing agencies were keen to
participate in both the design and implementation
of RYOGENS. These agencies included-
Connexions, Education, Health, (including the
Young Peoples Substance Misuse Service), Police,
Positive about Young People, Probation, Social
Services, Youth Offending Team. Evaluation
meetings indicated that all agencies identified
positive outcomes for vulnerable children.
25Implementing RYOGENS in Warwickshire
- Critical success factors
- Top management buy-in
- Early identification of key practitioners
- Multi-agency team with credibility and drive
- The ability to fit with existing processes and
initiatives CHARM (Children Area Risk
Management) - Goodwill.
26Implementing RYOGENS in Warwickshire
- Close liaison was established with other
- initiatives in Warwickshire to ensure
- duplication was avoided and developments
- could be shared effectively
- Warwickshire Sharing of Information Protocol
- Warwickshires Strategic Plan for Vulnerable
Children Young People - Childrens Integrated Systems
- Information Sharing Assessment (ISA).
27Developing RYOGENS in Warwickshire
RYOGENS project team has provided a forum for
discussion regarding developments in service
provision Increased age range for CHARM
referrals Referrals to Family Group Conferencing
Service Further developments anticipated
are Parenting referrals Mentoring referrals.
28RYOGENS in Warwickshire - The Future
Close liaison continues with workstreams
considering the new Childrens Agenda. Warwickshi
re will look to extend further the use of RYOGENS
to support the requirements of- ISA, Childrens
Integrated Services Common Assessment
Framework. It will also continue to develop its
use in supporting the crime prevention agenda.