Transcript Document

Every Child Matters
Introduction:
• Every Child Matters in Manchester
• Integrated working guidance to support
early intervention and prevention in
Manchester
• Common Process
BACKGROUND AND CONTEXT
• Every Child Matters, Children Act 2004,
CAF, Children’s Trust Arrangements
• Feedback from JAR
• Feedback from practitioners
• Work progressed via MSCB
PRINCIPLES THAT UNDERPIN THE MODEL
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The child’s welfare and safety is paramount
Safeguarding and promoting the wellbeing of children is everyone’s
responsibility
All Manchester children should have a good quality of life and be full and
active members of the community. Services will be provided that optimise
the potential and life chances for all children, and balance children and
young people’s rights with their responsibilities
Children are the responsibility of their parents and, where possible, children
should be brought up by their parents in families and communities. Parents
need to be supported and challenged to bring up children and young
people responsibly in a stable and happy environment using statutory
powers when necessary
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All agencies will support this philosophy initially through the provision of
universal services, which are child focused in their delivery and which
explicitly aim to assist good parenting
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Intervention at the first sign of need to help the family find their own solutions
to their problems
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Information should be shared with consent whenever possible
WHAT DOES IT AIM TO ACHIEVE?
The model will support practitioners to work together to enable every child and young
person in Manchester to achieve the five Every Child Matters priority outcomes
•Be healthy
•Stay safe
•Enjoy and achieve
•Make a positive contribution
•Economic well-being
and to promote the well-being of and safeguard every child and young person in
Manchester so that they are
•Protected from harm and abuse and
•Have a secure sense of belonging in a family, school, and local community
How will we do this?
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The provision of high quality universal services whatever the level of
need of children and young people in Manchester
Early identification of and targeted/integrated support for children/young
people with additional needs, underpinned by the Common
Assessment Framework, to ensure that needs are met as early as
possible and do not escalate
Effective assessment, planning, implementation and review (APIR) at
whatever level of need
Integrated support co-coordinated by a lead professional for children
with additional and complex needs
The effective application of MSCB and LAC procedures
KEY CONCEPTS
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Children’s needs lie along a continuum and need to be identified and
met at the first sign of difficulty in a coordinated and planned way
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Shift in language – request for support, acknowledging universal
services stay with children along the continuum of need, rather than
referral with its pass the parcel connotations
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Planned transfer of lead professional rather than case closed, NFA to
ensure children and families receive a seamless service until can be
held at universal service level
Challenges
• Turning the model into practice
• Changes in culture and thinking
• Levels of need in Manchester
Overcoming these challenges
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Working together to meet the needs of children and families
CAF and lead professional
Consultation
Good practice in information sharing
Shared understanding and common language
Practitioner and agency commitment to the model
Using existing structures e.g. District Safeguarding Fora and
CAF Steering Groups to review progress