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serious case reveiws

Last post 08-14-2008 4:36 PM by Mithran. 3 replies.
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  • 07-17-2008 11:43 AM

    serious case reveiws

     i have just watched the interveiw with Jimi Ogunkoya on the BBC website see it here:

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7510930.stm

    he is the father of the two children kiled by their mother in London.  he says that he thinks serious case reveiws are a waste of time and that people say lessons are bieng learnt when they appear that they are not. this made me wonder what others think of the serious case reveiw system and whether it is any worth in it. as a social work student i hear and read about them often so would like to hear others opinions.  

  • 07-17-2008 6:27 PM In reply to

    Re: serious case reveiws

    They are invariably talking shops, with everyone determined to ensure they don't leave the meeting with any bullet points (tasks) to burden their workload.

     

    On occasions that will mean no-one gets anything to do - as some individuals will baulk if they feel that they are "getting lumbered." Other, less experienced attendees won't have the facility to fight for their corner - do we expect a recent graduate to be able to get a grip amongst paediatricians, GP's CP officers?

    An absolute key requirement is that training is given on how a serious case review should be conducted, with dummy runs and scenarios where some political "savvy" and lateral thinking is expected to be displayed.  

     

     

  • 08-08-2008 10:09 PM In reply to

    • deb7777
    • Top 100 Contributor
      Female
    • Joined on 08-08-2008
    • derbyshire

    Re: serious case reveiws

    Last week  while working in a residential home for children under 11, I read a review from the 90s relating to a foster carer who eventually killed a baby she fostered this followed an emence cronologie of accidents.  This gave a detailed account of the children  fostered and accidents they had encounted for well over a 10 year period.  The picture painted, obviously based on hindsight ( which unfortunately as field workers we/they were are ablivious to at the time) was excessivly siniciter. 

    This highlighted for me the difficulties in ensuring foster carers are treated with the respect the majority of foster carers deserve, but in an areena of child protection where suspission on behalf of the social worker is imperitive.

    I hope that upon more reflection this will improve my practice. But in the same way I am aware just how much, we as workers rely on the work of others. ie, foster carer assessments, and statutory support, inital and cores, done by other workers and just handed over.  This was the most  pertenent raised issue of the review for me, other than age old information sharing etc.  the strength over time new workers gave to the assessment and oppinion of others. This though has to be worked with and is sysyematic, lets just hope on a personal practice level such reviews can make us aware of possibilities rather than defensive or overly suspisious.

  • 08-14-2008 4:36 PM In reply to

    Re: serious case reveiws

    We did a story on serious case reviews a few weeks ago on the back of the three-yearly report on child protection by all the various inspectorates.

    Apparently, Ofsted found that a quarter of SCRs they had looked at in the past year were inadequate; there were also very wide variations in what local safeguarding children boards did in response to deaths or serious incidents (some did very few SCRs and instead decided to have case file audits, management reviews instead); and wide variations in the number of deaths and serious incidents recorded by areas which the inspectorates felt reflected different recording methods.

    We also did a feature recently showing how lessons weren't being learned from SCRs, so it's not a great picture overall.

    Ofsted have got a report coming out soon on them which we'll be reporting on so look out for that.

     

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