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The importance of chronologies

The importance of chronologies. Patrick Ayre Department of Applied Social Studies University of Bedfordshire Park Square, Luton email: pga@patrickayre.co.uk web: http://patrickayre.co.uk . Why record?. History Support partnerships Provide continuity

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The importance of chronologies

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  1. The importance of chronologies Patrick Ayre Department of Applied Social Studies University of Bedfordshire Park Square, Luton email: pga@patrickayre.co.uk web: http://patrickayre.co.uk

  2. Why record? • History • Support partnerships • Provide continuity • Facilitate reflection, analysis and planning • Support professional development • Evidence for resources • Management monitoring • Evidence for enquiries and investigations • Evidence of acceptable standards

  3. Why chronologies? • Day to day recording, reflection, analysis, planning • Justifying our own practice • Making referral and challenging others • For the child

  4. Capturing chronic abuse • Single events often only significant in context; • Can often only understand present by setting in context of past • Intangible: Difficult to capture and compare • High threshold for recognition • Neglect is a pattern not an event

  5. The pattern of neglect

  6. The pattern of neglect

  7. The pattern of neglect

  8. The pattern of neglect

  9. Cumulativeness

  10. Failure of cumulativeness

  11. What’s the problem? • Chronic abuse and the principle of cumulativeness • Files very long and badly structured • Patterns missed and ‘chronic abuse’ overlooked • The problem of proportionality • Acclimatisation (case, agency and geographical)

  12. Information handling pitfalls • Failure to give sufficient weight to relevant case history; ‘Start again syndrome’ • Rule of optimism • Natural love • Cultural relativism

  13. Information handling pitfalls • Picking out the important from a mass of data • Facts recorded faithfully but not always critically appraised • Too trusting/insufficiently critical; • Decoyed by another problem • False certainty; undue faith in a ‘known fact’ • Discarding information which does not fit the model we have formed Department of Health (1991) Child abuse: A study of inquiry reports, 1980-1989, HMSO, London

  14. Information handling pitfalls • Too much not enough • Maintenance of focus on the child • Adult services and children’s services (hand-in-hand or hand-to-hand?)

  15. Information handling pitfalls • Tendency to move from facts to actions without ‘showing your working’ • Hesitancy to challenge other professionals or the conventional wisdom

  16. The chain of reasoning Facts  Analysis/summary  Conclusions/recommendations/action

  17. The chain of recording What happened/what you saw  What this means  What you did/what should be done (and why, if this is not clear from the above)

  18. The chain of recording • But how do you know which facts? • Must be informed by a basic risk assessment (would not always be spelled out on paper)

  19. Risk assessment • The dangers involved (that is the feared outcomes); • The hazards and strengths of the situation (that is the factors making it more or less likely that the dangers will realised); • The probability of a dangerous outcome in this case (bearing in mind the strengths and hazards); • The further information required to enable this to be judged accurately; and • The methods by which the likelihood of the feared outcomes could be diminished or removed.

  20. But what is analysis? You have gathered lots of information but now what? All you need to do is ask yourself my favourite question: “So what?” You have collected all this data, but what does this mean, for the service user, for the family and for the authority?

  21. Challenge your dodgy thinking • I am only a… and he is a…, so I had better keep my opinion to myself. • I am obviously in a minority, so I had better keep my opinion to myself. • We need to maintain harmonious relations, so I had better keep my opinion to myself.

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