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Health trusts to be marked on the quality of child protection systems

Posted: 08 January 2004 | Subscribe Online


The NHS is taking steps to improve medical professionals' awareness of child protection issues.

This year, for the first time, mental health trusts, acute trusts and primary care trusts will have to meet a new performance indicator on child protection.

The indicator for the 2003-4 star ratings will require trusts to comply with recommended child protection systems and procedures.

The rationale behind the indicator is based on Lord Laming's view that the NHS does not have systems in place "to ensure continuity of care or adequate consultant supervision".
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The indicator is one of eight introduced for acute trusts, 12 for mental health trusts and 10 for primary care trusts by the Commission for Health Improvement.

Meanwhile, plans have also been developed for all new paediatricians to receive mandatory child protection training by 2005.

Newly qualified doctors wishing to specialise in paediatrics will receive one day's training in the recognition and handling of child abuse within their first six months of training under a programme developed by the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health and children's charity the NSPCC. It will also be open to GPs and A&E doctors and organisers hope to extend it to qualified paediatric consultants.

The training will cover issues such as communicating child abuse concerns to patients, parents and colleagues; understanding the role social workers play; and awareness of factors that could indicate abuse.
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The training will be piloted in six areas in the summer.

Professor Margaret Lynch, outgoing chairperson of the RCPCH child protection committee, said the Victoria Climbi' case had highlighted the need for training and "got the college to take it seriously whereas before it was paid lip service".

Meanwhile, the RCPCH has confirmed it is to review advice on the use of internal photographs in child abuse cases after the High Court ruled that a father was wrongly accused of abusing his daughter because doctors interpreted photographic images incorrectly. 

- Performance indicators from www.chi.nhs.uk


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