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Getting it wrong – the example of children in residential care

Getting it wrong – the example of children in residential care. Peter McGill. The current picture. About 3000 children and young people with learning disabilities in residential schools, residential social care placements and health facilities

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Getting it wrong – the example of children in residential care

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  1. Getting it wrong – the example of children in residential care Peter McGill

  2. The current picture • About 3000 children and young people with learning disabilities in residential schools, residential social care placements and health facilities • About 700 of these in 52-week residential schools costing £108 million (£160k per child) • Challenging behaviour a key risk factor (99% prevalence in 52-week school sample) • Most placements out of area, reducing family contact, increasing vulnerability and feeding adult out of area residential care placements

  3. What leads to placement? • Complex needs • Almost complete absence of early intervention • Limited availability of evidence-based provision around challenging behaviour • Limited/poor quality professional support to families • Limited access to/exclusion from short break/respite care • Exclusion from educational provision • Family strain and coping difficulties • Limited (often complete absence of) active care management to meet child/family needs • Residential care as an “easy” solution for commissioners

  4. What would it take to change things? • Early and continued, family-centred, evidence-based support around challenging behaviour • Facilitated access to local generic and specialist provision (especially short breaks) • Competent and inclusive local services • Proactive approach including prevention and early intervention • “World class” commissioning – who are the people, what are their needs now and into the future, what capacity is required to meet these needs

  5. But this requires… • Real commissioning • Coordination across education, health and social care • A strategic approach to the totality of local provision • Sufficient, and sufficiently skilled people • Full inclusion of families as partners in commissioning and provision

  6. Contact Information: Peter McGill P.McGill@kent.ac.uk Tizard Centre University of Kent Canterbury Kent CT2 7LZ United Kingdom

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