British Association of Social Workers

The government has announced an independent commission into early intervention to ensure that children with multiple disadvantages get the best start in life. Children’s minister Sarah Teather and the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions Iain Duncan Smith said the commission will be chaired by MP and co-author of a report on early intervention Graham Allen and will report in January 2011. Ms Teather said: “No child’s future should be predetermined by the decisions or mistakes of his or her parents, and I firmly believe every child should have the chance to succeed, regardless of their background. Intervening earlier with troubled families can not only prevent children and their parents falling into a cycle of deprivation, antisocial behaviour and poverty but can save thousands if not millions of pounds in the longer term.” “This review demonstrates the importance the government places on improving early intervention. We want to learn from the areas already pioneering a successful approach to tackling troubled families early and build on local good practice,” she added. The commission will look at early intervention and recommend the best models, advising on how they could be extended across the country. It will also look at how schemes could be funded, including through non-government streams. In January the commission will report on best practice and publish another document on funding by May 2011. The enquiry is being commissioned as one of the first pieces of work to be submitted to the Social Justice Cabinet Committee, which is chaired by Mr Duncan Smith. Nushra Mansuri, joint BASW manager (England), said it needed to be asked where the funding for the work would come from, if not from government. “There is hard evidence out there that this is not boding well for the third sector who are doing some excellent, pioneering work but who end up being the first casualty with cuts,” Ms Mansuri said.“If the government is not going to fund this, it makes you question how committed it is.” She also pointed out that the Munro review has been asked to look at early intervention. “Education minister Michael Gove set out three areas for Munro to look at and early intervention is one of those strands. Her call for evidence on this area ends today just after this commission has been announced.” “This commission will be broader and wider than the Munro review which is in the context of child protection but it doesn’t come across as joined-up thinking and the government is not putting their money where their mouth is,” she said.

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Home secretary Theresa May has launched a review of anti-social behavior powers available to the police saying: “It is time to move beyond the ASBO”.

Highlighting that one in seven people believes their local area suffers from high levels of antisocial behavior, Ms May said the problem was so obvious that the last government could not ignore it. However she said the previous Labour government had taken a “top-down, bureaucratic, gimmick-laden approach” adding: “Such a centralised approach, imposed from Whitehall, can never be the best way to deal with an inherently local problem.”

The Home Secretary said that the ASBO had been seen as “the silver bullet that would cure all society’s ills”, but the latest statistics show that between 1 June 2000 and 31 December 2008, 16,895 ASBOs were issued and 9,247 or 55 per cent were breached at least once.

She said there was no “magic Whitehall lever” that could be pulled to tackle anti-social behavior in communities. The solution to different communities’ problems would not come from Home Office officials but from citizens, council employees, social workers and police officers, she added.

“We will put power into the hands of citizens. We will put our trust into the professionals,” she said. “And we expect everybody to take responsibility, take action, get involved, tell the police and the other agencies what’s going on, and hold them to account for what they do about it.”

The government’s role, she added, would be dealing with unemployment and reforming the welfare system, regaining discipline in school and putting teachers back in control in the classroom and encouraging young people to take responsibility for their communities. She also pledged that the government would overhaul the Licensing Act after highlighting that the total costs of alcohol-related crime and disorder are estimated to be between 8 and 13 billion pounds per year.

“Because tackling anti-social behavior is not just something for the police alone; it is not all about crime. Local authority workers; social landlords; health and education professionals; social services – they all need to work together, and to work with the police, to tackle anti-social behavior in whatever form it takes,” she concluded.

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The Scottish Social Services Council (SSSC) has said it will be business as usual for regulation in Scotland, despite the surprise announcement earlier this week that the General Social Care Council (GSCC) in England is to be abolished.

SSSC chief executive Anna Fowlie said she would continue to co-operate with the GSCC’s replacement body, as well as care councils in Wales and Northern Ireland.

“The SSSC is a separate organisation to the GSCC, is established under Scottish legislation and its regulatory functions not affected by this decision.
 We do, of course, work in co-operation with the GSCC and the other UK care councils to help ensure that consistent standards for social workers are maintained and mobility of this workforce across the UK is facilitated safely.”

BASW responded to the Westminster government’s surprise decision to abolish the GSCC and fold its regulatory work into a wider healthcare body, by insisting that the new entity must strongly recognise social work in its title and its focus.

News of the planned demise of the GSCC in April 2012 emerged in the Westminster Department of Health’s ‘Review of arm’s length bodies (ALBs) to cut bureaucracy’, a move aimed at securing projected savings of over £180m by 2014/15.

The review outlines a plan to ‘transfer the regulation of social workers to the Health Professions Council, which will be renamed to reflect its new remit.’

BASW chief executive Hilton Dawson called for the new regulatory organisation to be known as ‘the Health Professions and Social Work Council”.

He added: “The further development of regulation must allow for a statutory role for the UK College of Social Work and we envisage that the enabling legislation which will be required to fulfill this announcement will provide the occasion for the Social Work Act of Parliament for which BASW has been lobbying.”

The proposed April 2012 closure of the GSCC coincides neatly with the planed formal launch of the College of Social Work in March 2012, although how the GSCC’s work – in regulating the social work profession and monitoring standards of higher education provision – will be divided up in the future remains uncertain.

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The social work regulator in Northern Ireland is to hold talks with political leaders following the surprise announcement earlier this week that the General Social Care Council (GSCC) in England is to be abolished.

A spokesperson for the Northern Ireland Social Care Council (NISCC) said that the regulator would be meeting with the Department of Health Social Services and Public Safety to assess the implications of the decision.

NISCC chair Jeremy Harbison said he hoped the “skills and expertise they [the GSCC] have developed will continue into the new structures” for regulation in England.

Carolyn Ewart, manager of the Northern Ireland Association of Social Workers, said the decision to axe the GSCC had been made without consultation and “seemingly out of the blue,” adding: “It is unclear if the NISCC is at risk and I would hope that a similar sudden decision is not taken regarding its future.”

She said NISCC, which was “by and large well-regarded by social workers”, had some unique aspects that included setting standards for the Assessed Year in Employment required of new qualified social workers.

“I would be concerned if the regulatory functions were taken over by a non-social work body,” she added.

News of the planned demise of the GSCC in April 2012 emerged in the Westminster Department of Health’s ‘Review of arm’s length bodies (ALBs) to cut bureaucracy’, a move aimed at securing projected savings of over £180m by 2014/15.

The review outlines a plan to ‘transfer the regulation of social workers to the Health Professions Council, which will be renamed to reflect its new remit.’

BASW chief executive Hilton Dawson called for the new regulatory organisation to be known as ‘the Health Professions and Social Work Council”.

He added: “The further development of regulation must allow for a statutory role for the UK College of Social Work and we envisage that the enabling legislation which will be required to fulfill this announcement will provide the occasion for the Social Work Act of Parliament for which BASW has been lobbying.”

The proposed April 2012 closure of the GSCC coincides neatly with the planed formal launch of the College of Social Work in March 2012, although how the GSCC’s work – in regulating the social work profession and monitoring standards of higher education provision – will be divided up in the future remains uncertain.

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The social work regulator in Wales is to reflect on its future role following the surprise announcement earlier this week that the General Social Care Council (GSCC) in England is to be abolished.

The Care Council for Wales said the future of social work regulation would be included in the white paper for social services, announced by deputy minister for social services Glenda Thomas last month, which will be published next year.

Arwel Ellis Owen, chair of the Council, said: “In Wales, the Independent Commission established last year by Gwenda Thomas AM, Deputy Minister for Social Services, is tasked with looking at the future provision of social services and social care in Wales. Its findings will feed into the recently announced White Paper on the future arrangements for social services over the next decade which will be published in the new year. That will include the future arrangements for regulation and improvement of services and arrangements for the workforce in Wales.”

BASW responded to the Westminster government’s surprise decision to abolish the GSCC and fold its regulatory work into a wider healthcare body, by insisting that the new entity must strongly recognise social work in its title and its focus.

News of the planned demise of the GSCC in April 2012 emerged in the Westminster Department of Health’s ‘Review of arm’s length bodies (ALBs) to cut bureaucracy’, a move aimed at securing projected savings of over £180m by 2014/15.

The review outlines a plan to ‘transfer the regulation of social workers to the Health Professions Council, which will be renamed to reflect its new remit.’

BASW chief executive Hilton Dawson called for the new regulatory organisation to be known as ‘the Health Professions and Social Work Council”.

He added: “The further development of regulation must allow for a statutory role for the UK College of Social Work and we envisage that the enabling legislation which will be required to fulfill this announcement will provide the occasion for the Social Work Act of Parliament for which BASW has been lobbying.”

The proposed April 2012 closure of the GSCC coincides neatly with the planed formal launch of the College of Social Work in March 2012, although how the GSCC’s work – in regulating the social work profession and monitoring standards of higher education provision – will be divided up in the future remains uncertain.

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An Ofsted survey of social workers that shows they feel well-supported in their jobs has been dismissed by BASW as “absurd, ridiculous and out of touch with reality”.

Findings from the inspectorate’s first annual survey of social workers’ views, based on more than 4,000 responses from across England, found that most felt well-supported by line managers and happy with training opportunities.

But BASW chief executive Hilton Dawson said: “Ofsted’s suggestion is at odds with BASW’s research, the anecdotal evidence we receive every year from thousands of social workers and the daily experiences of our Advice & Representation Service.”

A poll carried out by BASW in June revealed that 63 per cent of social workers felt their department was understaffed and 96 per cent were concerned that cuts would significantly increase risk for service users. Mr Dawson said that child protection social workers faced excessive caseloads, bureaucracy, poor employer support and insufficient time to work with children and families.

One in five surveyed for Ofsted said they did not get enough time to work directly with children and families and half of social workers do not feel fully informed about the lessons from local serious case reviews. Chief inspector Christine Gilbert described the findings on serious case reviews as “worrying,” but said she believed the results from the Ipsos MORI-commissioned poll showed “valuable insights” into children’s social work.

But Mr Dawson said: “Underneath the headline statement, this survey confirms what we already know about a significant absence of training, excessive caseloads, insufficient time to do the job, high levels of bureaucracy and a continued failure to disseminate lessons from serious case reviews.”

One social worker, who responded to the survey, said: “The majority of us are working long hours to simply keep up. This issue of long hours is ‘hidden’ due the expectation of management and the ethos of disciplinaries. We are frightened to say we cannot manage our workloads.”

Mr Dawson said: “Blinkered headlines aren’t the solution to social work’s problems. We need investment in training, pay and career structures, combined with real measures to reduce bureaucracy and free social workers to spend time with children and families.”

He added: “I urge Ofsted to throw its weight behind every possible effort to give our invaluable social work professionals the time and resources they need to make a difference with the most vulnerable people in our country.”

To view Safeguarding and looked after children go to www.ofsted.gov.uk

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BASW has responded to the full publication of the Serious Case Review into the tragic death of Khyra Ishaq by urging others to join social work in learning lessons from the case. The SCR revealed that professionals who worked with Khyra, the seven-year-old Birmingham girl who died from starvation in 2008, missed a number of opportunities to intervene and could have prevented her death.

The SCR, the first to be published in full, identifies a series of lapses by several agencies including the police, family GP, school medical team and children’s social care.

BASW chief executive Hilton Dawson, speaking shortly after the review was published on July 27, four months after Khyra’s mother and her boyfriend were convicted of manslaughter, said that social workers everywhere must learn the lessons from it but that government too had to recognise that the profession needed a major injection of support if it was to go further in protecting children from harm.

“This tragedy and the opportunity offered by the new coalition government can be a new turning point in the battle to protect children, but only with a determined will to give social workers the support they must have to be at their most effective.

“Social work simply must receive the investment in training, pay and career structures, combined with real measures to reduce bureaucracy and free social workers to spend time with children and families, if we are to go further and minimise the chances of tragedies such as the death of Khyra Ishaq in future.”

In April, the council said that three social workers had been disciplined over Khyra’s death. The report says that communications between agencies in Birmingham led to a number of missed opportunities to intervene by professionals two years before Khyra’s death.

“Three incidents during March 2006 were not progressed, either by failures of paperwork to reach the correct departments, failure to follow safeguarding procedures, or to conduct thorough checks prior to case closure, resulting in any knowledge and intervention remaining purely single agency at that stage,” the review says.

By December 2007 there was clear evidence Khyra was stealing food and in the same month she and some of her five siblings were removed from school by their mother, who said she intended to educate them at home. This followed changes to the mother’s behaviour, “deteriorating relationships with schools, increased aggression to and reduced cooperation with all professionals”.

When school staff attempted to communicate their concerns to children’s social care, they were not properly heard, the review says. “Concerns were inaccurately recorded initially and the focus placed upon attendance issues, as opposed to mother’s changed behaviour, increased aggression to professionals and the children’s obsession with food.”

Social workers appear to have under-estimated the gravity of the referral. They asked the school to undertake an assessment using the common assessment framework and request a police “safe and well” check, which the review deems “inappropriate”. An initial social work assessment in February 2008 was not completed and the risks to the children were inadequately understood, largely because professionals were unable to get past the mother.

The review says: “Adult resistance to professional intervention, doorstep conversations, the mother’s sound knowledge of home education legislation and a hostile and aggressive approach, influenced and affected professional actions, preventing a full understanding of conditions within the home and seemed to render professionals impotent, thereby directing the focus away from the welfare of children”.

Particular concerns about safeguarding children subject to home education are raised in the review. It notes that there is no effective method to ensure that home education remains suitable, developmentally appropriate and safe for a child, and it adds: “Given the tragic outcomes identified within this review, [this] also represents a major safeguarding flaw.”

The review notes that between 1998 and 2008 the children missed a minimum of 129 professional appointments, which was only partly explainable by the pressures on parents of a large family. Failed attendance increased dramatically in 2007, yet “the response to these failures within the agencies was not always actively addressed, or the significance fully understood and therefore not communicated with partner agencies.”

In its recommendations, the review calls for work to identify how inter-agency communication can be improved, examinations of the referral screening and assessment processes in Birmingham children’s social care, and the education secretary to be made aware of safeguarding worries about home education, “emphasising that the parents’ right to home educate does not outweigh the rights of the child”.

Les Lawrence, cabinet member for children, young people and families at Birmingham council, said the majority of the lessons from the serious case review had already been acted on.

He added: “Today, as we remember Khyra Ishaq’s life, we re-affirm our commitment to create a children’s social care service that better protects our young people from those who would harm them. Let this be Khyra Ishaq’s legacy.”

Hilton Dawson said many people would question how such a tragedy could happen in the 21st century but reminded people that social workers had also played their part in reducing such instances over recent decades.

“Social workers know, better than anybody, how to best safeguard children and research over the past 30 years shows that good social work systems have reduced child deaths by some 40%, from around 130 deaths per year in 1974 to some 80 in 2006,” Mr Dawson said.

“Yet this relative success has been achieved despite, not because of, government support. Even at a time of restraint in public spending social work needs to be prioritised, with real investment and much improved public support and understanding for our vital work.”

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BASW has responded to the Westminster government’s surprise decision to abolish the General Social Care Council and fold its regulatory work into a wider healthcare body, by insisting that the new entity must strongly recognise social work in its title and its focus.

News of the planned demise of the GSCC in April 2012 emerged today in the Department of Health’s ‘Review of arm’s length bodies (ALBs) to cut bureaucracy’. The document revealed details of a plan to reduce ALBs – organisations working at national level, but at ‘arm’s length’ from a government department – from 18 to between eight and ten, securing projected savings of over £180m by 2014/15.

Announced by health secretary Andrew Lansley the review outlines a plan to ‘transfer the regulation of social workers to the Health Professions Council, which will be renamed to reflect its new remit.’

A Department of Health source suggested to BASW England joint manager Ruth Cartwright that the new body could be titled the ‘Health and Care Profession Commission’, a name at odds with a call from BASW chief executive Hilton Dawson for the new regulatory organisation to be known as ‘the Health Professions and Social Work Council”.

Expressing concern at the absence of consultation ahead of the sudden announcement, he said “it is essential that BASW is fully consulted and involved in the construction of this new body”.

He added: “While BASW has advocated with the new government that regulation of the profession must be much leaner and fitter we are concerned that this announcement has come out of the blue.

“The further development of regulation must allow for a statutory role for the UK College of Social Work and we envisage that the enabling legislation which will be required to fulfil this announcement will provide the occasion for the Social Work Act of Parliament for which BASW has been lobbying.”

The proposed April 2012 closure of the GSCC coincides neatly with the planed formal launch of the College of Social Work in March 2012, although how the GSCC’s work – in regulating the social work profession and monitoring standards of higher education provision – will be divided up in the future remains uncertain.

The shift of regulatory responsibility could have an impact on the fees social workers pay to register. The Department of Health source suggested to Ms Cartwright [see blog http://baswengland.tumblr.com/post/861584721/the-demise-of-the-gscc-world-and-the-difficulties-ahead] that fees could rise from £30 a year to as much as £76, in line with fees paid by comparable health sector personnel.

Clearly shocked by the announcement, the GSCC’s chair Rosie Varley said: “We were surprised by this decision. We recognise the economic imperative behind the proposal. However discussions have yet to take place about how this will work, including the costs, benefits and wider consequences. We are seeking an early meeting with the Health Professions Council and the government.”

The ‘Review of arm’s length bodies’ also contained news for the Care Quality Commission, which currently regulates health and adult social care provision. The review recommends retaining the CQC and potentially assuming certain functions from such disparate organisations as the Human Tissue Authority and Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority.

BASW welcomed the retention of the CQC but insisted that before assuming new responsibilities it had to demonstrate its effectiveness in monitoring social care services. Ruth Cartwright said: “The CQC has some way to go to show a good understanding of social work and social care – BASW is always ready to assist it in gaining this increased understanding and urges it to work positively with us and with those who are developing the College.”

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A social worker who threatened to kill his wife and children has been admonished by the General Social Care Council (GSCC).

Paul Carney, who has an unblemished 31-year career in social work, pleaded guilty to harassment at Reading Magistrates’ Court in January and was given a community order. In its written decision, conduct committee said: ‘While this was undoubtedly persistent and deliberate conduct, the committee considered that this was an uncharacteristic episode of behaviour which took place against a backdrop of a breakdown of the registrant’s marriage, which appears to have adversely affected him.’

It added that it did not believe Mr Carney, who is a social worker at Brent council in London, was likely to repeat his behaviour. The committee took into account evidence given by a team manager at the local authority, who praised Mr Carney’s “experience, professionalism, integrity and good judgement” and said he was being considered for promotion.

It also noted also that Mr Carney has shown ‘some insight’ and rejected arguments by the GSCC presenting officer that his behaviour had been a breach of trust under the codes of practice. Mr Carney has been admonished for five years.

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Mental health organisations are calling for an urgent investigation into why safeguards introduced in England and Wales to prevent people who lack capacity being detained unnecessarily in care homes and hospitals are being significantly under-used.

In April 2009, Deprivation of Liberty Safetyguards (DoLS) were introduced under the Mental Capacity Act 2005, which mean care providers and hospitals must make an application to a council or primary care trust if they want to deprive someone of their liberty.

Under the law, they can make an application to a council or PCT, which have a responsibility to carry out an assessment of the case, if they feel it is necessary, in their best interests or to protect them from harm. But more than a year after they came into force, figures show that around 7,300 applications have been made – just over a third of the 21,000 the government predicted.

A review published by the alliance, which is made up of 75 mental health organisations, says there is widespread lack of understanding of the MCA and care providers do not know when they need to apply for a DoLS authorisation.

Review author Roger Hargreaves said: “There are huge variations between areas of a similar size and demographic make-up, which is the main cause for concern. While it is still early days for these safeguards, we have concerns about their implementation and the extent to which DoLS are being understood and used by care staff, and also about how much support and advice is being made available to the representatives of individuals affected by DoLS.”

The review also says that many of the “best interests” assessors employed by councils, most of whom are social workers, have no previous experience of this type of role and have only had a day’s training in the detail of the law. And Independent Mental Capacity Advocates (IMCA), who can provide advice and guidance for relatives representing the patient, who may themselves be elderly or disabled and struggle to make sense of this complicated field, are being underused.

The review recommends:

• The government needs to look at why so few applications have been made compared to levels expected and why there are such disparities between supervisory bodies and geographical areas.

• The government should issue revised guidance on the meaning of deprivation of liberty which is comprehensible to care providers, and especially to care home staff.

• Refresher training for assessors should focus on improving their knowledge of the legal requirements and should emphasise the importance of full compliance with them.

• Where a friend or family member is selected as representative, the appointment of a section 39D IMCA should be automatic unless the representative positively declines it.

To read Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards: an initial review of implementation go to http://www.mentalhealthalliance.org.uk/resources/DoLS_report_July2010.pdf

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