
Key Principles and Best Practices in Safeguarding and Care Act Implementation
Learn about the key principles of the Care Act, including empowerment, prevention, proportionality, protection, partnership, and accountability. Explore how Making Safeguarding Personal is integrated into the Care Act to ensure individuals' well-being and safety. Gain insights into peer challenges and the importance of considering individuals' desired outcomes in safeguarding processes.
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Presentation Transcript
Safeguarding and the Care Act ADASS Spring Seminar 16th April 2015 Dr Adi Cooper & Mimi Konigsberg
Key Principles of the Care Act the person knows best person s views, wishes feelings and beliefs should always be considered the focus is on well-being, prevention or delaying the development of the need for care and support and reducing needs decisions should be made taking all circumstances into consideration decisions with the person s participation the need to balance the person s wellbeing with that of family and friends involved with the person the need to protect people from abuse and neglect the need to minimise the restriction of rights or freedom of action a strength based approach is critical to assessment and promoting independence the need to consider risk and proportionality when deciding how best to respond to safeguarding concerns
Making Safeguarding Personal is explicitly included in the Care Act wellbeing definition includes protection from abuse and neglect as well as wellbeing in all other areas of life Care Act new function includes the provision of services that prevent care needs from becoming more serious or delay the impact of their needs 6 principles of safeguarding Culture Change
Six Safeguarding Principles: Empowerment - I am asked what I want as the outcomes from the safeguarding process and these directly inform what happens next Prevention - I receive clear and simple information about what abuse is, how to recognise the signs and what I can do to seek help Proportionality - I am sure that the professionals will work in my interest, as I see them and they will only get involved as much as needed Protection - I get help and support to report abuse and neglect. I get help so that I am able to take part in the safeguarding process to the extent to which I want Partnership - I know that staff treat any personal and sensitive information in confidence, only sharing what is helpful and necessary. I am confident that professionals will work together and with me to get the best result for me Accountability - I understand the role of everyone involved in my life and so do they
Peer Challenge Message Peer challenges highlight that people tend not to be asked the outcomes they want. Often they want more than one outcome, which are sometimes not easy to reconcile. People generally want to feel safe but also to maintain relationships. For some people the only human contact they have is with the person/people who is/are harming/abusing them Peer review messages LGA June 2013
Making Safeguarding Personal The response -A simple message Making safeguarding personal is about engaging with people about the outcomes they want at the beginning and middle of working with them and the ascertaining the extent to which those outcomes were realised at the end. To do this, a mix of responses is required to enable people to achieve resolution or recovery and access to justice LGA June Peer Review 2013
What Making safeguarding Personal can do MSP enables safeguarding to be done with, not to people MSP focuses on achieving meaningful improvement to people s circumstances rather than just on investigation and conclusion MSP should utilise social work skills better than just putting people through a process MSP should enable practitioners, families, teams and SABs to know what difference MSP has made in outcomes for people
A strategic approach to MSP providing clear leadership in each agency working in safeguarding including elected members. ensuring partner agencies are well-informed introducing person-centred, outcome-focused practice to safeguarding is a cultural change that needs wide ownership recognising that partnership engagement in this culture shift is crucial building on existing good practice e.g personalisation working across regions to deliver consistency of practice and procedures and workforce development mainstreaming this approach as good social work practice
Operational approach to MSP personalised information, advice and guides and language safeguarding and MARAC meetings participation and an outcomes focus documentation promote person centred practice and gather and report on quantitative and qualitative evidence link to engagement and awareness raising prevention address the use and commissioning of advocacy services focus on MCA and DoLS understanding positive approaches to risk and supported decision making encourage people to think about recovery as well as resolution using a range of creative responses
Making Safeguarding Personal How to deliver a person-centred, outcome focused approach? Key Questions for Practitioners: What difference (outcome) is wanted or desired? How can we work with people to enable that to happen? How do we know outcomes have been understood and our intervention has made a difference ? Does the person feel safer and protected ?
Making Safeguarding Personal Toolkit What is it ? The updated toolkit provides a range of models, theories, approaches, skills, areas of specialism which are already common but not used in the safeguarding context Some approaches have been established in just a small number of pioneering council areas Some development work is needed to customise to adult safeguarding How can it be used ? A practitioner guide, a resource for service development, a tool to stimulate innovation Examples include (from a longer list): Use of family and networks, including group conferences Building resilience, confidence, assertiveness, self-esteem Attachment based approaches Motivational interviewing and cycles of change
Implementation The fundamental shift revolves around professional practice; practice that puts the adult and their wishes and experience at the centre of safeguarding enquiries and which seeks to enable people to resolve their circumstances, recover from abuse or neglect and realise the outcomes that they want it is not business as usual
Making Safeguarding Personal - achievements 2009/10: Literature review 2010/11: A Toolkit of Responses developed 2012/13: 5 Councils were test beds 2013/14: 53 Councils actively participated 2014/15: Mainstreamed to all Councils with start up workshops 9 ADASS regional conferences 2 workshops for Safeguarding Adult Board Chairs RiPfA evaluation (publication due in June 2015) Updated MSP toolkit Journal of Adult Protection Special Issue (June 2015) DH/HSCIC work with IT providers Support to individual L.A. s and SAB s Updated LGA Domestic Abuse guide
Emerging Issues leadership- national, regional and local-role of the DASS how to engage partners / providers and align a MSP approach how best to measure outcomes and ensure quality managing DoLs/MCA workload pressures commissioner/provider issues-stronger links + CCG s, CQC, QSG s how to work with risk and engage Members on the dilemmas workforce development -social workers and trainers IT systems-support not hindrance newer areas e.g. self-neglect and how to respond balance of procedures and professional judgement consumer/citizen engagement
Questions for discussion How are you embedding Making Safeguarding Personal forward? What support do you need? What can you offer? What issues are there for you in implementing the adult safeguarding aspects of the Care Act? Our Top Tips?