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Police adapt simulator software to improve child protection skills

Posted: 30 January 2003 | Subscribe Online


Social work managers from Croydon and two other councils are to undergo critical incident training on a computer simulation based on the Victoria Climbie case.

The pilot scheme, due to start in the spring, will bring together managers involved in child protection from social services, health, the police and education.

If successful, staff from the remaining 30 London boroughs could undergo the training by the end of the year.

The pilot scheme will use Hydra, a system developed by the Metropolitan Police in the wake of the Stephen Lawrence Inquiry to train detectives in handling critical incidents.

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Detective chief superintendent Derrick Kelleher of the Metropolitan Police's child protection group, said that recognising when an incident had the potential to go "out of control" was a key skill for professionals to learn. "The failure to recognise that the Climbi' case was a critical incident in the making ended in tragedy," he said.

He defined critical incidents as those where "the confidence of the community is likely to be lost if you handle it incorrectly".

The Hydra training presents an evolving scenario, with controllers feeding in new elements at various points. It records the decisions made at each stage on audio and video so that their influence can be reviewed later.

The Metropolitan Police's director of applied learning, Jonathan Crego, adapted the programme for child protection cases by building a storyline around the sequence of events leading up to Victoria Climbi''s death and similar cases.
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The simulation involves participants being called to interview family members and take part in mock press conferences.

The decision to extend its use to child protection work was made by the London Child Protection Committee, the pan-London body set up last year in the wake of the Victoria Climbie case.

The committee is currently drafting new child protection guidelines following a critical report, based on a survey conducted two years ago, which found that agencies were working with "unforgivably poor and out of date" policies.



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