Improving outcomes for children, young people and families
Submitting Institution
University of SalfordUnit of Assessment
Allied Health Professions, Dentistry, Nursing and PharmacySummary Impact Type
SocietalResearch Subject Area(s)
Medical and Health Sciences: Public Health and Health Services
Studies In Human Society: Policy and Administration
Summary of the impact
Improving outcomes for children, young people and families focuses
on supporting the development of health and social care initiatives to
promote social inclusion and improve quality of life, family cohesion, and
health outcomes for `troubled', at risk, and disadvantaged families,
demonstrating the following impact:
- Guiding practice, strategic decision-making and organisational change
in partnership with local authorities and voluntary sector
organisations, resulting in positive outcomes for children and families;
- Influencing national policy development in relation to improvements in
health and social care services, resulting in reduced dependence on
services.
Underpinning research
The key researchers and positions they held at the institution at the
time of the research are as follows: Tony Long, Professor of Child
& Family Health (from 2002, Professor from 2006), Dr Joan Livesley,
Senior Lecturer in Child Health (from 1986), Michael Murphy, Senior
Lecturer in Social Work (from 2003), Michael Ravey, Senior Lecturer in
Learning Disabilities (from 2007), Dr Debbie Fallon, Senior Lecturer in
Child Health (to 2012) School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work.
Context: `Troubled families' are those with problems which lead to
their disadvantage and negatively affect the communities around them, at
high cost to the public sector. Government data collected in October and
November 2011 estimated that £9 billion is spent annually on troubled
families — an average of £75,000 per family each year. Of this, an
estimated £8 billion is spent reacting to the problems these families have
and cause, with just £1 billion being spent on helping families to solve
and prevent problems in the longer term; Communities
and Local Government. Long et al undertook a programme of
research with local authorities and voluntary sector organisations across
the UK to assess the effectiveness of joint health and social care
services, working with practitioners across different agencies to improve
organisational culture and joint-working practices, as well as learn wider
lessons for policy in support of improving outcomes for children, young
people and families. The impact of this case study is underpinned by the
following research:
-
2006-2012: A series of impact evaluations established the
elements of health and social care interventions and associated factors
that promote social inclusion, quality of life, family cohesion, and
health outcomes for troubled, at risk, and disadvantaged families in
single boroughs; on the footprint of NHS primary care services; or
across the UK, with a range of local authorities, PCTs and national
children's charities.
- The research team's expertise culminated in a UK-wide, 4-year
longitudinal research project with Action for Children to establish the
factors making interventions for neglected children more successful. The
groups studied included chaotic families; teenagers (in relation to
pregnancy, young parents, access to health services); black boys and
young men; multi-ethnic communities; and children at risk of harm.
Ineffective practice was identified and essential practitioner
behaviours were clarified. More effective means to engage young people,
service-resistant families, and neglectful parents were developed.
- The research also included reviewing the corresponding workforce and
deriving new structures and processes to provide better support for the
groups that were of concern. An integral part of the project was to work
with Action for Children to enhance the quality of data through the
introduction of a new assessment tool and development of additional
elements of the standing in-house electronic database; and to improve
practice and outcomes through shared learning.
- Key findings of the research include:
- Managing neglect is complex. The chronic and multi-faceted nature of
the problem needs a joined-up approach with a blend of services tailored
to individual needs over a long period of time.
- A multi-agency approach is vital; local area organisers need to focus
on ensuring services and professional staff are coordinated effectively,
including potentially, pooling budgets;
- Short-term intervention is not cost-effective for families with
multiple problems. Lasting results require intensive interventions from
multiple services over an extended period of time;
- Professionals should ensure parents feel valued and respected during
assessments and interventions. Service providers need to be more aware
of effective `customer relations' to build trust and engagement;
- Immediacy of response is crucial. Delays caused by bureaucracy
disengage parents. Service providers need to honour promises promptly.
- The research is ground-breaking owing to its approach in developing a
research programme combining health and social care professionals to
address the complex problems faced by vulnerable children, at-risk
teenagers, and chaotic families in an integrated manner, making
recommendations about the application of its findings in partnership
with a range of health and social care providers.
References to the research
Key outputs
1. Long T, Davis C, Johnson M. Murphy M, Race D, Shardlow S (2006) Standards
for education and training for interagency working in child protection
in the UK: implications for nurses, midwives and health visitors.
Nurse Education Today 26 (1) 11-22. DOI
2. Murphy M, Shardlow S, Davis C, Race D, Johnson M, Long T (2006) Standards
- A new baseline for interagency training and education to safeguard
children? Child Abuse Review 15 (2) 138-151. DOI
3. Long T, Fallon D, Devitt P, Oak E, Murphy M, Dugdill L (2008) A
community health needs evaluation to improve uptake of services at a
children's centre in a deprived and geographically isolated town.
Journal of Children's and Young People's Nursing 2 (3) 108-114. URL
4. Long T, Murphy M, Livesley J, Fallon D, Ravey M (2008) Evaluation
of Blackpool Springboard Project. Blackpool CYPS. ISBN:
978-1-905732-53-1
5. Long T, Fallon D, Murphy M, Derbyshire D, Hewitt-Craft L (2010) Understanding
the children's social care workforce. Leeds: CWDC. ISBN
97-1-907842-00-9
7. Long T, Fallon D, Murphy M, Derbyshire D, Hewitt-Craft L (2010) Understanding
the children's social care workforce. Leeds: CWDC. ISBN
97-1-907842-00-9
6. Livesley J, Ravey M, Long T, Fallon D, Murphy M (2010) Evaluation
of the Blackpool Family Intervention Projects. Blackpool Council
CYPS. ISBN: 978-1-907842-04-7
8. Long T, Murphy M, Fallon D, Livesley J, Devitt P, Cavanagh A,
McLoughlin M (2012) 4-year longitudinal impact evaluation of the
Action for Children UK Neglect Project: outcomes for the children,
families, Action for Children, and the UK. Action for Children.
ISBN: 978-1-907842-30-6
Key evaluation reports
9. Four year longitudinal evaluation of the Action for Children UK
Neglect Project (PDF)
10. The RNCM Medical Notes project at the Royal Manchester Children's
Hospital: outcomes for children, families, musicians and hospital staff (PDF)
11. Evaluation of the RU Different? social norms programme: Salford
Authority, Year 9, summer 2012
12. Evaluation of Blackpool Springboard project (PDF)
13. Understanding the children's social care workforce (PDF)
14. Evaluation of teenage pregnancy intervention strategies in Wigan
15. Exploring the impact and effectiveness of the Wirral Health Services
in Schools (HSIS) Programme
16. Evaluation of the Lancashire Holding Families project (Early Break)
17. Evaluation of the Action for Children Supported Housing, Supported
Tenancy and Teenage Pregnancy Floating Support Services.
Details of the impact
Guiding practice, strategic decision-making and organisational change
in partnership with local authorities and voluntary sector
organisations, resulting in positive outcomes for children and families:
- The 4-year
longitudinal evaluation of the effectiveness of interventions for
neglected children commissioned by Action
for Children has supported the development of effective
measurement tools to guide assessment and review, and also established
links between presenting circumstances, interventions and outcomes for
children. Clear explanation of the factors resulting in reduction of
risk to the level of universal services has proved valuable to the
national charity and to other organisations across the UK. Long et al's
research established that for some children, referred too late for
effective early intervention, proceeding into care could be accelerated
as a result of the rigour of the assessment process which was found
convincing in court.
- The Evaluation
of the Springboard Project in Blackpool developed a range of
findings, applicable in a range of settings to the extent that they
influenced the development of similar projects in local authorities in
the UK, based on the compelling conclusions of the Evaluation that; "the
sum of this sustained partnership effort had left Blackpool, as an
local strategic partnership, with a far stronger collaborative agenda
in commissioning, organisational development and practice than it
enjoyed before the Springboard process began."
- For example, Three
Rivers District Council used the Evaluation to structure its
`Think Family' Project: "The Springboard project in Blackpool is one
of the most advanced Think Family projects in the country and the
University of Salford's published research into Springboard states the
many benefits that the `Think Family' approach can bring across a wide
range of performance indicators from smoking cessation through to the
reduction in repeat incidents of domestic violence."
- The Evaluation of the Springboard Project has been shown the
approaches taken in the Project to be effectively applicable
internationally: An
exploration of the effective use of intensive family support services
to address child abuse and neglect:"The success of the project
to date has been captured by the external evaluation undertaken by
Salford University over two years. It identified the huge culture
change that had taken place across services; "...A mindset has been
established of sharing information and problems, then sharing
solutions." It is evident from the evaluation that this initiative has
had a significant impact on the quality of the lives of families and a
systemic change in the way services are delivered.....The Springboard
model of family preservation should be trialled across Queensland with
a full commitment across government to promote its success" (Boyle
2012).
Influencing national policy development in relation to improvements in
health and social care services resulting in reduced dependence on
services:
- The Northern Ireland Assembly has noted the impact of the 4-year
longitudinal evaluation of
the effectiveness of interventions for neglected children study:
"It is rewarding to see the positive impact that the Clooney Family
Centre is having on the lives of the families it engages with and I
commend the work carried out by Action for Children through its many
life-changing projects which span all areas of Northern Ireland,"
said Junior Minister Bell after
a visit of Northern Ireland Executive Ministers to a family
centre in Derry/Londonderry: "The Ministers were there to see,
first-hand, the centre's involvement in the UK wide Child Neglect
Intervention Pilot. Action for Children has developed the UK
neglect intervention project to identify effective and timely
interventions with children and families. This project is the subject
of a longitudinal evaluation by the University of Salford."
- Long et al worked in close partnership with health and social care
professionals to evaluate, learn from and make recommendations for
improved approaches to lead to improved outcomes. Models resulting from
Long et al's research have informed central government policy and
strategy for interagency working:
- The innovative research approach led to the development of new ways of
working and cultural change in workforce attitude often referred to as
the "no wrong door" approach. Professional and support workers have come
to recognise the needs of whole families and to work across traditional
professional boundaries to the benefit of children and families,
evidenced in the All Party Parliamentary Local Government Group
report "Primary
Justice".
- The research contributed to the development of the UK government's
Troubled Families Programme, which has turned around the lives of 14,000
of England's toughest to tackle households in 15 months, with 50,000
families being worked with by mid-2013. Working
with Troubled Families: A guide to the evidence and good practice
DCLG 2012 identified the importance the skills of individual
workers, in family intervention work both in building an honest and
productive relationship with a family and influencing the actions of
other agencies around that family identified in Long et al's research: "Family
intervention workers are dedicated to the families and provide an
antidote to the fragmented activity from many different agencies that
usually surrounds a troubled family. They `grip' the family, their
problems and the surrounding agencies and are seen to be standing
alongside the families, their difficulties and the process being put
in place, which can lead to new approaches to dealing with long
standing problems."
Developing the workforce and guiding training:
-
"This approach will have a major influence on how we progress the
social care professional framework and moves the emphasis away from a
large number of individual learning routes to a more simplified model.
The framework should empower employers and learners to make informed
decisions about the most appropriate training that best suits their
needs by providing relevant and timely information." Ann Harrison,
National Manager for Social Care former Children's Workforce Development
Council
Sources to corroborate the impact
a) Working with Troubled Families: A guide to the evidence and good
practice DCLG 2012 https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/66113/121214_Working_with_troubled_families_FINAL_v2.pdf
b) Northern Ireland Assembly http://www.northernireland.gov.uk/index/media-centre/news-departments/news-ofmdfm/news-ofmdfm-march-2012/news-ofmdfm-220312-junior-ministers-visit-clooney-family-centre.htm
c) All Party Parliamentary Local Government Group (2009) Primary Justice:
an inquiry into justice in communities. http://pressitt.com/public/files/2009/07/19/205/LGiU-Primary-Justice.pdf
d) Hertfordshire County Council (2009) Investment of countywide
performance reward grant `Think Family'.
http://www.threerivers.gov.uk/GetResource.aspx?file=09%2011%2011%20LSP%20i%20-%20(8a)%20Think%20family.pdf
e) Boyle C (2012) An exploration of the effective use of intensive family
support services to address child abuse and neglect. Queensland: The
Winston Churchill Memorial Trust of Australia.
http://www.childprotectioninquiry.qld.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0004/175999/Boyle_Chris.pdf
f) Children's Workforce Development Council
http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20120119192332/http://cwdcouncil.org.uk/sociaI-care/research-events
g) David Derbyshire, Director of Practice Improvement, Action for
Children, Letter attached.