Title: Safety and Risk Framework: Concepts and Applications
1- Safety and Risk Framework Concepts and
Applications - Â
Barry Salovitz Senior Director Casey Family
Programs
2The sacred requirement
- to assess a childs safety in the home and
respond appropriately, should not be simply a
required agency event, or only a form completion
compliance task. You must make it more a way of
thinking.
3What is a Framework?
- A basic conceptual structure that ties together a
set of mutually congruent and supportive beliefs,
values, principles and strategies seeking to
address a common purpose.
4Flying Without a Safety and Risk Framework -
Dangers
- Idiosyncratic beliefs, practice, decision-making
- Conscious and unconscious bias
- Errors in decision-making
- Inconsistencies
- Documentation is haphazard
- Consultation and supervision suffers
- Lack of standards for quality assurance and
quality improvement
5The Framework Test
- What interventions are appropriate?
- What constitutes progress and lack of progress?
- How much progress is expected before recommending
a child return home or case closure or other
permanency option? - Practice model that unites everything in a way
that can be applied in the field
- What decisions need to be made?
- The causes or factors associated with the area of
interest/concern - What information needs to be assessed?
- How should this information be interpreted?
- What practice model is best suited?
6Framework Concepts
- All safety threats involve risk not all risks
involve safety threats - Protective capacities are strengths not all
strengths function as protective capacities - Safety plans and service plans complementary
but different functions - CA/N cases are open for active safety threats
risk cases are sometimes open child well-being
cases alone are often not open - CA/N cases are closed when safety threats have
been resolved or protective capacities are
sufficient to protect high risk has been reduced
7A Framework for Safety Decision-Making
Source Morton, T. Salovitz, B. (2006)
Evolving a Theoretical Model of Child Safety in
Maltreating Families Child Abuse Neglect,
Vol. 30, Issue 12, December 2006, pp.
1317-1327. Â
8Safe
- caregiver provides protective capacities
sufficient to protect his/her child from serious
harm
9Unsafe
- caregiver does not provide protective capacities
sufficient to protect his/her child from
immediate or imminent serious harm
10Serious Harm
- actual or threatened consequence of an active
safety threat or missing or insufficient
protective capacities that is significantly
affected by a childs degree of vulnerability
and - is life-threatening or risk thereof
- substantively retards the childs mental health
or development or risk thereof - produces substantial physical suffering,
disfigurement or disability, whether permanent or
temporary, or risk thereof involves sexual
victimization.
11Safety Factors
- set of specific signs of present danger
- combine with a child's vulnerability
- may directly impact a child's safety status
- unless offset or mitigated by sufficient
protective capacities -
- (Handout)
12What primary strengths do you look for
- in a caregiver for your child, niece, nephew,
grandchild, or godchild?
13Protective Capacities
- behavioral, cognitive, and emotional
characteristics of a parent/caregiver - specifically and directly can be associated with
reducing, controlling and/or preventing serious
harm to a child -
-
-
- (Handout)
-
14Vulnerability
- degree to which a child can avoid, negate or
modify the impact of safety threats - missing or insufficient protective capacities
- Â
- (Handout)
15Safety Threat
- family situation, behavior, emotion, motive,
perception, or capacity that is out of control,
immediate or imminent, and is likely to have
serious effects on a vulnerable child
16A Safety Threat May Be a..
- Situation (e.g. unsafe home, criminal activity)
- Behavior (e.g. impulsive actions, assaults)
- Emotion (e.g. immobilizing depression)
- Motive (e.g. intention to hurt the child)
- Perception (e.g. viewing child as a devil)
- Capacity (e.g. physical disability)
- (Handout)
- (Example)
17Safety Threats Involve
- Underlying Conditions
- needs of family members, perceptions, beliefs,
values, feelings, cultural practices and/or
previous life experiences that influence the
maltreatment dynamic within a family system and
can increase the likelihood of child maltreatment
or its severity - AND
- Contributing Factors
- social problems or conditions (family or
community), that can increase the likelihood of
child maltreatment or its severity - (Examples)
18A Framework for Safety Decision-Making
Source Morton, T. Salovitz, B. (2006)
Evolving a Theoretical Model of Child Safety in
Maltreating Families Child Abuse Neglect,
Vol. 30, Issue 12, December 2006, pp.
1317-1327. Â
19Risk
- likelihood of any harm to a child in the future
due to abuse or neglect
20Risk Factors
- highlight the family system
- may include demographics, needs, strengths,
safety threats, functioning levels - associated with understanding the nature of the
familys involvement with the CW system
(maltreatment, underlying conditions
contributing factors) - likelihood of future A/N
21Differentiating Safety Risk
- SAFETY
- is dichotomous (safe/unsafe)
- identifies serious harm occurring immediately, or
when conditions are present where the serious
harm can occur at any time - must be assessed quickly
- RISK
- is a continuum
- identifies the likelihood of any degree of harm
that may occur at some point in the future - is assessed over time
- (Guided imagery)
-
22Differentiating Safety Risk Assessments
- Risk Assessment
- estimates the likelihood of future abuse/neglect
- helps to identify the nature of the safety threat
and/or the underlying conditions contributing
factors that are sustaining both safety threats
and/or future risk - helps identify how to intervene support
positive change
- Safety Assessment
- assesses present danger
- identifies what needs to be controlled
- helps identify how to control immediate safety
threats
23A Framework for Risk Decision-Making
24Emerging Danger
- likelihood of serious harm that is not immediate
- threats are starting to surface or escalating in
intensity, pervasiveness, duration and/or
frequency - protective capacities are weakening
25Emerging Danger Examples
- alcohol use increasing
- stress over difficult child behavior elevating
- childs grandmother told mother that she can no
longer dump the child on her when the mother
goes out drinking - perception of the child increasingly negative
- caregiver reports having to spank the child more
often - frustrations with the demands of the child
increasing - caregiver not home at the time of last two
scheduled caseworker visits - missed last two appointments w/ drug and alcohol
counselor - inconsistent responses to accidental injuries
to child - childs willingness to talk with you has
significantly changed - (case example)
26Safety Decision Examples
- Safe
- In-Home Safety Plan
- C. Out-of-Home Safety Plan
- D. Legally Authorized Out-of-Home Safety Plan
27Safety Plan
- intervention strategy to control a safety threat
or supplement insufficient protective capacities
to protect a child from serious harm
28Supplementation of Protective Capacities
- The addition of additional protective capacities
to the family system without removal of the child -
-
29Safety Planning Guidelines
- specific and concrete control strategy
- must be implemented immediately
- whenever possible, parent should have a prominent
role in its development and implementation - should employ least restrictive strategies
possible while assuring the childs safety
30Safety Planning Guidelines (cont)
- can often be developed and implemented by
incorporating identified protective capacities - must assess the caregivers willingness and
capability to agree and abide by the terms of the
safety plan - active participants must be capable of
monitoring/enforcing its terms
31Safety Plan Guidelines (cont)
- must be continuously re-evaluated and modified,
whenever necessary - cases should not be terminated, outside a court
order, when an agency managed safety plan is
active
32Guidelines for Discontinuing a Safety Plan
- When a threat of serious harm no longer exists
- or
- control of the threat within the family is
probable can be maintained without safety
focused intervention or active safety plan
monitoring
33Service Plan
- Intervention strategy designed to
- resolve safety threats
- reduce risk
- promote child well-being and
- attain permanency
34Critical Issues for Reunification/Case Closure
- The safety re-assessment must focus on the extent
to which - Underlying conditions or contributing factors
related to safety threats have been
resolved/diminished - Protective capacities have increased
- Child vulnerabilities have been reduced
- Feasible plan for reunification support exists
- (Case)
- (Handout)
35The Key Question
Not whether the threats will ever appear again,
but Whether they can be controlled with the
child in the family