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TV series shows lack of progress

Posted: 03 February 2005 | Subscribe Online


BBC1's fly-on-the-wall series Someone to Watch Over Me had many strengths. By far the most important was the portrayal of social workers as caring and compassionate and tough-minded - a welcome antidote to the bumbling and incompetence usually shown on TV.

The reality of difficult decision-making came over clearly. None of the Bristol social workers was a gambler, but while weighing up the risks and benefits in their cases each feared that the next turn of events might be their downfall.
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The most powerful message was in the last of the series. One woman was an enthusiastic hospital social worker who was on a period of extended sick leave - the assault she had suffered from a service user seemed to be the straw that broke the camel's back as she struggled to keep on top of her 30 cases. Another woman was a front-line team manager who had resigned, realising the sheer impossibility of keeping any kind of grip on the 300 plus children's cases within her responsibility.

It would be good if Bristol social services were an exception but sadly this isn't the case. Social workers across the country continue to be overstretched and poorly resourced. None of my own staff has a caseload of 30 children - but they are under pressure. Give me 300 children's cases to manage, and I too will pack my bags.

Lord Laming's proposal to increase "the status and rewards" of children's work awaits implementation. This is not merely a matter of social workers' pay and professional recognition, important though those are; it is about the price of protecting children.
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While the series was being filmed last year, Lisa Arthurworrey appealed to have her name removed from the Protection of Children Act List. She failed. Many in the profession will have thought her position not a million miles removed from their own, and find abhorrent that she might be the scapegoat for the systemic problems that the BBC portrayed.

Until children's services are resourced adequately there will be more preventable child fatalities, more Lisa Arthurworreys, and certainly more of the wasteful staff turnover that we saw in Bristol.

Richard Purdie is a senior care manager at Bradford Council


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