Transcript Slide 1

CSPG Report to the LSP 2012
Families with Multiple Problems
Update
Children’s Services Planning
Group Report
• The CSPG exists to enable coordination of
service delivery for children and young people in
Hastings and St Leonards
• It covers therefore a wide range of outcomes
and issues, a selection of which are included in
the report presented
• The CSPG brings together those with
responsibility for improving outcomes from
across a range of partner organisations
Children and Young People’s Plan
• Last year the Children and Young
People’s Trust agreed a new county-wide
Children and Young People’s Plan
• It sets out 8 aspirations and 12 priorities
for collective action by our partner
organisations
• The CSPG report is based around these
priorities
Local prioritisation
CSPG members have prioritised the following outcomes for
Hastings:
• More children and young people from low income
families doing well in their education More children and
young people from low income families doing well in
their education
• Fewer children needing repeated Child Protection Plans
• More children making good progress in life and learning
by age 5
• More 17 and 18 year olds taking part in education and
training
Working to improve outcomes
• For each of the issues covered in the
report there are specific activities focused
on Hastings and St Leonards aimed at
improving outcomes
• Importantly, none of the issues raised are
‘stand-alone’ – children, young people
and families mostly experience them
together, so a holistic response is also
needed
Key Strategic Developments
• THRIVE: Children’s Services
Transformation Programme
• Special Educational Needs &
Disability Pathfinder
• Families with Multiple Problems
THRIVE: a transformation programme
We want to change the
way services are
delivered and the way
many of us work
to improve the
lives of children
whose families
struggle to cope
We could be doing better to:
 help families overcome challenges prior to social care
involvement
 support real change in families once
social care involvement is necessary
 act more swiftly
when the signs are
strong that families
cannot parent
safely
The need for change
Rate of Referrals per 10,000 children under 18 for the year ending 31 March
1,600
1,400
1,200
East Sussex
1,000
Kent
800
Suffolk
600
ENGLAND
400
200
0
2007/08
2008/09
2009/10
2010/11
The need for change
Rate of children who were the subject of a child protection plan at 31
March per 10,000 children
70
60
Rate
50
East Sussex
40
Kent
30
North Somerset
20
ENGLAND
10
0
2008
2009
2010
2011
What we will invest in:
 Meeting rising costs in the short term
 Developing early help and social care
services
 Just do its – quick win activities
 Workforce development
 Engaging our workforce, children and
families in shaping services
 Change management
What should it mean for you?
We are aiming for a system where:
it is easier to know where to get
more help for a family
or
how to get professional support
to do more yourself
What should it mean for you?
There are better tools to help
you make a decision about
risk and how to manage it
and
more advice from social
workers
What should it mean for you?
Better
opportunities for
staff and
volunteers to
develop their skills
and confidence to
help families
What should it mean for you?
 We support you to take a
more personalised approach
to responding to families’
needs
 Some roles are expanded so
we have keyworkers
supporting whole families
 We have better ways of
assessing families’ needs
together and planning
support with them
In conclusion
Thrive: In conclusion
 A transformation of the whole system
 Changes to the way services operate
 Opportunities for staff development
 Big cultural change
Special Education Needs &
Disability Pathfinder
• Working closely with parents, children and young
people, schools and colleges to look at new ways of
supporting disabled children and their families
• Simplifying assessment and inter-agency response
• Developing keyworkers for disabled families to help
coordinate the services and assessments they need
• Trialling personal budgets for disabled children so that
families can put in place more personalised services that
they control
Special Education Needs &
Disability Pathfinder
• Publishing a ‘local offer’ of services for disabled children
and those with SEN
• Working with schools on identification and early
response where children have SEN
Families with Multiple Problems
Project
April 2012
It’s all about…
• Giving families the tools and support they
need to meet their own challenges…
• …and the resilience to conquer future
challenges with less intervention
• Less cost to the public purse
• Making best use of time and resources
MIXED-ECONOMY EMBEDDED
KEYWORKER SERVICE MODEL
KEY
Services (all agencies)
Intensive family keywork services
Intensive keyworkers
Family caseholders
Keywork advisors
•Referral management and
case allocation
•Screening, audit and
interagency brokering
•Case management and
keyworker supervision
•IT, case recording systems,
monitoring and managing
•Workforce development
•Communication and
participation
•Support and advice network
•Small grant fund
Keyworking
Service
Management
Timeline
Conversations with
participating organisations
about capacity, potential
and learning
March
April
May
Exploring the role of the
keyworker and the caseholder
and the skills, knowledge
support and resources they will
need
Planning the central
management
function
June
July
1st phase
new service
starts October
‘12
September
Preparing and training
the first cohort of
keyworkers,
caseholders and
advisors
TFT’s Financial Framework
• We would be able to take part in the
payment by results scheme when families
have the following criteria:
– Young people involved in crime and families
involved in anti-social behaviour
– Households affected by truancy or exclusion
from school
– Locally defined criteria (next slide)
And also have an adult on out-of work benefits.
Local discretion filter
For us to define, could include:
• Child protection
• More than three additional services
• Criminal activity
• Underlying health problems (including mental
health, substance misuse)
• Teenage pregnancy
• Domestic abuse
• Risk of homelessness
Any others?
Key messages
• Start small and manageable
• Design – deliver – challenge – learn –
grow - review cycle
• A system that suits East Sussex’s needs,
not simply the Government requirements
• Family participation and frontline worker
consultation essential parts of design
• Linking with key developments and
projects (Thrive, MASH, Section 75, etc)
• Name of project under review!