www.paceuk.infoT
Tom DuffinNational Partnerships Director
•Pace•What we do•Parents Perspective•Relational Safeguarding Model•Parents e-learning•Volunteer Befriending•Working with SSCB
Aims:
Background
Pace works alongside parents and carers of
children who are – or are at risk of being –
sexually exploited by perpetrators external
to the family.
We offer guidance and training to
professionals on how child sexual
exploitation affects the whole family.
Pace
• National Parent telephone support
• Co-located Parent Support Workers
• Volunteer befriending scheme
• Parent networking days
• Online parents forum
• Accredited Training for practitioners
• Influence in national and local policy
• Prevention work and parental awareness
We provide:
One-to-one telephone advice and support
“Our parent support workers provide independent, non-judgmental and confidential support. We are here to listen
to your concerns, give information on statutory agencies and procedures and to pass on advice from other affected
parents, should you require it.”
“Mum really looks really values the time she spends talking with Anna.” Det Const. Staffs Police
We provide:
Parent Network Days
Pace holds thrice-yearly Parent Network Days around England to allow parents affected by child sexual
exploitation to meet each other and share their experiences. The idea is to reduce isolation, share knowledge and create
independent support networks.
Some parents choose to attend Parent Network Days even when their child has exited an exploitative relationship. They
understand the difficulties faced by parents new to the situation and want to offer hope of a positive outcome. Others need support to deal with the aftermath of their
child’s sexual exploitation.
We provide:
Befriending Scheme
Pace can also offer a voluntary befriending scheme to help break the isolation many parents feel and provide a friendly
yet informed ear.
Pace volunteer befrienders are fully trained and supported to develop a non-judgemental relationship with a parent,
based on mutual trust and an ability to empathise with the issues that parents present. Matches are designed to last
between 6 – 18 months.
We provide:
Accredited Training
•An introduction to CSE and its impact on parents and carers – 1 day (Level 1)
•Parents as partners in tackling child sexual exploitation – 1 day (Level 2)
•Advanced practice in working with Parents and families – 1 day (Level 3)
•CSE awareness and training for Foster Carers – 1 day
•CSE awareness and training for Residential Carers – 1 day
•CSE for social workers: Working with parents and carers affected by CSE – half day
•Train the trainer for practitioners delivering Community Briefings on CSE to parents
and carers – 1 Day
•Train the trainer for practitioners delivering Parents as Partners training to those
whose work brings them into contact with families affected by CSE – 1 Day
We provide:
We provide:
Advice Centre
In Child Sexual Exploitation(CSE) the offender is normally outside the home and
family. CSE is generally not used to describe dangers in the home or other
forms of abuse that children may suffer.
“Any child or young person may be at risk of sexual exploitation, regardless of their
family background or other circumstances” (Department for Education 2009)
The information within the CSEGG dataset indicates that from April 2010 to March 2011 at least 16,500 children
displayed three or more signs or behaviour indicating they were at risk of child sexual exploitation.
(“I thought I was the only one. The only one in the world” OCC, Nov 2012 P5)
“Local authorities and their partners are still not meeting their full responsibilities to prevent child sexual exploitation
in their area, to protect its victims and to pursue and prosecute the perpetrators.”
(“It couldn't happen here, could it?” OFSTED Nov 2014)
Prevalence:
Communities and Local Government Committee - Third Report
Child sexual exploitation in Rotherham: some issues for local government – Nov 2014
”On the evidence we took the alarming conclusion is that Rotherham was not an outlier and that there is a widespread problem of organised child sexual exploitation in England. It follows that other authorities not only need to review their
own arrangements in the light of the Jay Report but also the Government needs to ensure that the guidance and benchmarks are in place to ensure these reviews are effective and children are identified and protected.”
Prevalence:
Judge
police officer
Health Visitor
NHS senior manager
Nurse
UniversitUniversityy
ProfessorProfessorBusinessman
Counsellor
social worker
Detective Inspector
youth worker
HeadTeacher
HealthVisitor
Consultant Neuro-Surgeon
Occupations of some affected families
• 41% of call for evidence submissions identified children having drug and alcohol problems as a result of CSE.
• 32% of submissions identified children self-harming as a result of CSE.
• 27% of submissions raised broader concerns about victims’ mental health following exploitation.
• 85% of the sexually-exploited young people who were interviewed had either self-harmed or attempted suicide as a result of CSE.
(“I thought I was the only one. The only one in the world” OCC, Nov 2012 p.49)
Impact of CSE on victims:
“Sexual exploitation can have profound and damaging consequence for families, including parents and carers, siblings and extended members, and impact on their health, work life, family cohesion, economic stability and social life”
(Safeguarding Children and Young People from Sexual Exploitation Supplementary Guidance to WTTSC, p.17)
Impact of CSE on families:
“Our understanding of child protection must develop from one focused on protecting younger children from abuse in the home to one incorporating the protection of older children from abuse located and experienced outside the home.”
(Pearce, 2014:125)
Professionals work in partnership with parents seeing them as part of the solution
and not the problem:
•A more holistic approach by working alongside
the family
•Recognises that parents have their own support
needs and if supported have greater resilience to
safeguard their child.
•Understands the value of parents in disrupting
and preventing CSE
The Relational Safeguarding model
•The risk to the child is usually outside the home
•The impact of grooming on the child affects the family dynamics and breaks down relationships
•The child may show/express hostility or aggression to their parents because of the grooming process
•The parents may not know what is wrong or know how to safeguard their child without support
Why use a Relational Safeguarding approach?
• Maximising the capacity of parents and carers to safeguard their child.
• Early intervention & prevention.• Enabling family involvement in safeguarding processes
including decision making.• Ensuring the safety and wellbeing of the family.• Balancing the child’s identity as both an individual and
as part of a family unit.
The Relational Safeguarding Model focuses on:
• They are primary safeguarders of their children.
• Supported, informed and engaged parents are
better equipped to safeguard their children and work in
partnership with
practitioners.
• They hold vital information about their child
• Parents and the family supply the majority of out-of-
hours and long term support in assisting a child to exit
safely from exploitation
The importance of involving parents:
• They can be key in gathering evidence
• They can encourage/support their child to disclose
• They can support their child through the prosecution
process – leading to increased likelihood of
conviction
• Involving/supporting parents may prevent the child going
into care
The importance of involving parents:
Referring parents to Pace - Tel: 0113 240 3040
Or email on: [email protected]
FREE: online awareness resourcewww.paceuk.info/keepthemsafe
www.paceuk.info
Referrals
Unit 10, Acorn Business ParkKillingbeck DriveLeeds LS14 6UF0113 240 3040www.paceuk.info
Thank You
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