1 / 19

Recognising the Damage: Children with a Disability living with Domestic Violence

Recognising the Damage: Children with a Disability living with Domestic Violence Eileen Baldry & Jan Breckenridge (UNSW) Joan Bratel (Spastic Centre of NSW). Introduction. This presentation: Information on DV & children with a disability Need for frontline worker response

flower
Download Presentation

Recognising the Damage: Children with a Disability living with Domestic Violence

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Recognising the Damage: Children with a Disability living with Domestic Violence Eileen Baldry & Jan Breckenridge (UNSW) Joan Bratel (Spastic Centre of NSW) ACWA 2006

  2. Introduction • This presentation: • Information on DV & children with a disability • Need for frontline worker response • Proposed seven step framework • Hopes for outcomes from more appropriate response ACWA 2006

  3. Domestic violence • The term DV, often used interchangeably with family violence refers to actual or threatened violence in a domestic or family context where an adolescent or adult family member, partner or ex-partner attempts physically, sexually, psychologically or economically to dominate or harm other adult family member(s). • DV recognised as one of the most entrenched forms of violence. It is notifiable. ACWA 2006

  4. Children with a disability • Nineteen percent of Australians – or 3.9 million people - have a disability • 12% of young people in Australia (0-24) suffer at least one long-term impairment. ACWA 2006

  5. Abuse of children with a disability • Vulnerability of children with disabilities to abuse. • Understanding the scope and effects of violence. • Lack of data relating to families where there is a child with a disability. • Impact on agency responsiveness. ACWA 2006

  6. Impact of D.V. on the development and well being of children • No incidence or prevalence studies relating to the impact of D.V. on children with a disability. • Impact studies of D.V. on children within the ‘normal’ population have shown. • increased physiological arousal in response to generalised conflict. • Heightened aggressions, impulsiveness, anxiety and poor social skills. ACWA 2006

  7. Issues for workers • Children with disabilities may not be able to recognise, resist or disclose abuse. • Lack of worker experience & skill may add to this • responses to DV trauma may be confused with the effects of a particular impairment. • So although children with disabilities over-represented among abuse victims, they are under-represented in the caseloads of such workers ACWA 2006

  8. Indicators in children with a disability • Unusual changes in demeanour • Unusual emotional distress • Sudden loss of weight • Disability becomes exaggerated • Worker observation of violence • Disclosure by child or non-offending family member ACWA 2006

  9. Frontline response Why the need for a frontline response framework? • This area is poorly investigated and there is little guidance for workers • The following is derived from a generic framework and is our suggestion for one way forward ACWA 2006

  10. 1. Develop Awareness 2. Consider Needs Consider ConsequencesAction/inaction 3. Safety & Security 4. How to Engage Community Links Who will? 5. Respond Specifically Impact of my/or agency actions 6. Follow up 7. Reflect

  11. Step 1 • Develop awareness of domestic violence, children and disability • Know how violence manifests • Familiar with disabilities & way they manifest • Learn about effects of DV • Clarify role of worker’s response • Know the effects of action & inaction ACWA 2006

  12. Step 2 • Consider and notice the needs of children generally and in relation to their disability • Skill development consistent with disability • Understand communication possibilities • Assess communication capacity • Notice actions & interactions of children who experience DV and their carers ACWA 2006

  13. Step 3 • Attend to safety • Identify what is unsafe for the child • Consider impacts of any actions to secure safety especially once worker leaves • Identify who can contribute to the increased safety of the child ACWA 2006

  14. Step 4 • Decide if and how to engage with children and/or caregivers • Consider child’s disability & associated needs • Consider specific needs of carers • Decide on appropriate engagement • Provide an individual response • Know where to seek advice • Whether or not direct engagement with child, worker needs to be child inclusive ACWA 2006

  15. Step 5 • Respond specifically and appropriately • Obtain information regarding available and relevant local services • Be aware of the gaps in services • Take into account what could go wrong • Know that a decision not to act is a response • Consider how responses will place the child(ren) • Negotiate how to proceed with others involved • Compile information ACWA 2006

  16. Step 6 • Decide whether and how to follow up • Even when perpetrator removed these children need ongoing support • Continue to notice any effects upon children and family • Acknowledge importance of worker • Acknowledge significance of others who support children ACWA 2006

  17. Step 7 • Reflect on Practice • Analyse and reflect on responses and consider what could have been done differently • Seek professional development re children with disabilities and DV • Contribute to organisational policy and practice • Contribute to domestic violence prevention programs ACWA 2006

  18. Conclusion • Professionals work alongside families to construct ‘solutions’ that they own and can live with • Careful listening; no assumptions re ‘what is best’ for a particular family or child with a disability • worker’s beliefs and attitudes impact on ability to respond constructively and with integrity to children with a disability ACWA 2006

  19. Conclusion • Children and young people with a disability are children first and have the same right to protection, to feel safe, to be consulted and to be heard as any other child or young person • Child’s right to have DV addressed. This right should be the focus of attention and not the disability ACWA 2006

More Related