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SAFE CONTACT TRAINING SAFE CONTACT TRAINING

SAFE CONTACT TRAINING - PowerPoint Presentation

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SAFE CONTACT TRAINING - PPT Presentation

Edinburgh 2012 Training ground rules Confidentiality Looking after ourselves Respecting others S haring the responsibility to challenge each other respectfully Timekeeping Distractions The system ID: 374884

violence child children worst child violence worst children contact risk abuse separation dad fears mum don

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Slide1

SAFE CONTACT TRAINING

Edinburgh 2012Slide2

Training ground rules

ConfidentialityLooking after ourselves

Respecting others

S

haring

the responsibility to challenge each other respectfully

Timekeeping

DistractionsSlide3
Slide4

The systemSlide5

Life on three planets

(Adapted from Marian Hester)

Child protection:

(

public law);

Child as victim

mother seen as

failing to protect focus

On changing her

Domestic violence:

(civil and criminal law);

Focus on offence and

offender

and changing him;Woman as victim; Child invisible

Child contact:(private law);Mother’s resistance Considered hostile; Presumption of Contact; father As victim (?)

Father invisible

Child invisibleSlide6

Domestic Abuse and the SystemFamily and friends

Bail conditionsInterdicts and Non Harassment OrdersFamily MediationChildren’s HearingsChild Protection PlanCourt Systems

No supportSlide7

Getting It Right for Every ChildSlide8

Named PersonSlide9

Service Generated RisksSlide10

Service Generated RiskSlide11

What are Service Generated Risks?When agency gives poor advice

When an agency thinks someone else is doing itWhen agencies don’t have resourcesWhen an agency follows beaurocratic processes

When a agency “refers on”

When an agency focuses on one participant

“Clearly not within our remit”

When professionals are judgemental

When professionals don’t know what to do

When professionals don’t see the bigger pictureSlide12

Service Generated RisksAn important job had to be done and Everybody was sure that Somebody would do it. Anybody could have done it, but Nobody did it. Somebody got angry about that because it was Everybody’s job. Everybody thought that Anybody could do it, but Nobody realized that Everybody wouldn’t do it. It ended up that Everybody blamed Somebody when Nobody did what Anybody could have done.Slide13

The worst advice in the worldSlide14

Most common contact scenarioSlide15

Group TaskIdentifying Service Generated Risks in contact scenariosSlide16

Day 1 - Domestic

violence and parental separationSlide17

Domestic violence and parental separation

Of

the many thousands of incidents of domestic violence against women recorded each year in the British Crime Survey,

54%

occurred when the couple were no longer living together.

Slide18

Parental separation

In Every Child Matters 2003 it was noted that around 150,000 couples divorce in the UK per year. Two thirds of them have children under 16. This does not even include figures for unmarried family separations. At least 1 in 3 children under 16 in the UK will experience parental separation.Slide19

The good childhood report 2012Slide20

A study of 2500 children of separated parents in the States found that between 75% and 80% of them were functioning well within two years of separation. This means that 20 – 25% will experience serious social or emotional problems amounting to significant harm compared to less than 10% of young people from intact families.

A UK study in 2004 found unsurprisingly that family conflict both before and after separation is a big determinant of whether your child will be one of the 75% who fare okay or the 25% who don’t.Slide21

Elizabeth Marquardt (2005) interviewed 1500 adults in the USA and found that

half of those from separated parents compared to 1/3 of others say they felt the need to protect their mothers emotionally

nearly 1/3 compared to 1/6 of others felt need to protect Dad

nearly 1/3 of those from separated parents compared to less than 1/6 of others felt need the protect siblingsSlide22

RiskSlide23

23

Risk assessment

It’s easy to overlook risk issues in contact cases:

There is a strong assumption that contact must always be beneficial for the children, or that it is the parent’s right to have contact no matter what they have done -

(whereas court inspections show that the “presumption of contact” leads to unsafe decisions and a tendency to disregard risk issues)

There is a tendency to overlook the impact on the children of violence to the mother “he was never violent to the kids”

(whereas guidance to the courts clearly indicates that “domestic violence is a significant failure in parenting”)

P

rofessionals find it hard to ask in detail about abusive behaviour

And parents find it hard to tell us about it

We tend to over-rate our impression of the client, and underrate their past history (but past behaviour is the best predictor of future behaviour)

We get confused when there are competing allegations (serious allegations always need to be investigated in detail)Slide24

24

Risk assessment

To counteract these tendencies, we need to ask the right questions about the right things:

Risk assessment involves establishing the presence or absence of factors known to be associated with continued perpetration of abuse.

The most important of these is the history of abuse – once a person has hit their partner, they tend to keep on doing it

(one US study of 1500 men showed 35% average re-assault rate within 6 months of the offence, but

80% of offenders engaged in

threatening and/or

verbally abusive

behaviours within that time)

Williams and Houghton (2004) Law

and Human

Behavior

, Vol. 28, No. 4Slide25

25

Assessing the history of violence and abuse

Severity, frequency, persistence, escalation of violence

Signs

of imminent risk

Severity, frequency,

persistence of other forms of abuse:

Verbal, psychological/emotional abuse

Jealous, ‘proprietorial’

behaviour

Coercive control

perhaps

key indicator

Sexual violence and abusePost separation abuseExposure of childrenDirect abuse to childViolence in other/previous relationshipsSlide26

Approaching the

issue with mumSlide27

Getting started

Role explanationThis might be a difficult process

and involve difficult compromises

I’m

sure you’ve thought about that when deciding to come.

What

made you think it mattered enough to give it a try

?

What are the costs of the conflict / would be the advantages of moving on for you and for xx?

Get her

consent to ask direct questions

Would you tell me if I ask you something you don’t want to answer - would you speak out?Slide28

Exploring worst fears

What are your worst fears?What do you think are your xx’s worst fears?

What are dad’s worst fears?

How could dad best reassure you and xx?Slide29

RiskWhen did you first meet?

First like about each other?What were the strengths and weaknesses of the relationship? What did you argue about most? How were your arguments at best and worst?How did it get physical when arguing? What do you feel are the worst things he’s done to you? And to xx? And post separation? (get clear pictures)

Check out remaining concerns around mental health, substances, where this person lives and with whom. Slide30

Meeting with mum and child togetherSlide31

To child

Who do you think is most worried about you seeing your dad?

What do you think mum’s biggest worry is?

To mum

Do you agree with that?

To child

Do you worry you might upset mum if you wanted to see dad?

To mum

Could you reassure xx that you okay with them wanting to see their dad?

To child

How do you guess mum might feel if you saw dad and things went well - do you worry she might be a bit upset?

To mum

Could you reassure xx that you’d be okay with things going well between xx and dad?

To child

Is it okay if we spend some time talking about this together without mum now?Slide32

Day 2

Speaking with childrenSlide33

ISLANDS

There are three islands drawn by the worker – One is where the child lives, one is joined to this by a gated bridge. Potential visitors to the child’s island live here. The child has the key to the gate and control who visits and when. There is another island further away and not joined at all to the child’s island.

Get the child to put what and who they want on their island and to decide who might be able to visit sometimes (putting those people on the visitors island). When will they be allowed to the child’s island? Who lives on the island far away? What is in the water?

They can use

colours

and/ or pictures to draw these people and the worker should ask open questions about what the

colours

and pictures and positions of different people mean to the child.Slide34
Slide35

Wishes and feelings about contactIf your mum was OK about you seeing your dad, how would you feel about seeing him?

What would be the most comfortable and safe feeling place to see him?Is there someone else who might make your seeing him feel more fun, more comfortable or safer by being there? What would you especially worry about seeing him? What would biggest worry?

What would you look forward to most about seeing him? Slide36

ICEBERGS

The worker explains to the child how most of an iceberg is hidden beneath the water and draws this out.

The worker asks the child what they show when their mum and dad fight? What would be visible in terms of their actions and feelings. This is drawn or written onto the visible section of the iceberg.

The worker asks the child what they don’t show and what lies underneath. This is drawn or written into the submerged section of the iceberg.Slide37

IcebergsSlide38

Making sense of the behaviours that aren’t okay

Daddy / mummy does some things that are not right.

A lot of families have problems like this even though they might not tell people about it.

Daddy / mummy loves you.

This is very confusing.

It isn’t even a bit your fault - you’re too young / small to be able to control them or stop them

There is no excuse for daddy hitting mummy or you. Violence is wrong, no matter how angry you get

.

No matter what you do you don’t deserve to be hit.

Slide39

Approaching the

issue with dadSlide40

stance

Do

Don’t

Be neutral

Be

conflictual

Be Matter of fact

Be

judgemental

Explain why you’re asking

Try

to do intervention – try to change him

Explore alongside

Ask “why?”Make an ally of the side of him that wants to changeCollude

Be respectful Be nastyBe directBreach other’s confidentiality – especially re. safety (no “she said…” etc)Be matter of factExpect him to tell the same story as herEmpathise with his pain (not his hostility)Expect to know the truthBe gently persistantChallenge him a lot Be curiousinterrogateSlide41

Getting started

Role explanationThis might be a difficult process

and involve difficult compromises

I’m

sure you’ve thought about that when deciding to come.

What

made you think it mattered enough to give it a try

?

What are the costs of the conflict / would be the advantages of moving on for you and for xx?

Repositioning his anger – reflecting back values

You feel like no-one’s heard your side - so being listened to is really important to you

so fairness really matters to you

so justice is something you feel really strongly about – tell me what you mean by justice….Get his consent to ask direct questions Would you tell me if I ask you something you don’t want to answer - would you speak out?Slide42

Be explicit about your safety needs

If the above gives you cause for concern then you can ask

If you begin to feel angry at me or misunderstood by me how can we make sure you won’t [do whatever he has done elsewhere]

or

just walk out on this for good?

What could you do in that situation?

What could I do to help?Slide43

Exploring worst fears

What are your worst fears?What do you think are xx’s worst fears?

What are mums worst fears?

Thinking about xx’s child’s fears, what’s the worst you could do right now?

What’s the most reassuring you could do?Slide44

The wall

What / who are obstacles between where their lives and contact with their children are now and how they want them to be? (this might, for example, be about what stands between them and their contact with their children) – these are the bricks in the wall (you can draw it or build it or just talk about it)

When they face this wall how do they feel? (for example, anger, helplessness, shame)

How might they act when these feelings are strongest? (what are they tempted to do and say?)

Which actions would help to dismantle the wall and which would only serve to strengthen it? (possibly brainstorm in 2 columns)Slide45

Risk

When did you meet? When did the relationship start getting serious? How soon did you move in together/marry?What did you see in your partner when you first met? What did she see in you, do you think?

What were the strengths and weaknesses of the relationship?

What did you argue about most? How were your arguments at best and worst?

How did you get physical when arguing? In what ways do you think you might have come across as scary or intimidating in an argument?Slide46

What do you think is the worst thing you’ve done to her? And post- separation? (get clear pictures)

If you could see a film of yourself during that argument, how would you look? Did you pace around, shout, bang things, break things, shout?

On a scale of 1 – 5 how loud/hard etc was that?

How long that go on for?

Where was xx?

How did that incident end?

When you picture that in your minds eye (describe back the end of that incident) what are realising?Slide47

Back to the children

How has the violence in your relationship affected your relationship with your children?What do you think they are aware of?What have you noticed about how the children are affected by the violence and abuse between the adults?

Do you talk with your child about the conflict in the family? What do you say? What would you want to say, if you could?

Slide48

Challenging minimisation

Acknowledge and discuss the barriers to disclosure

But be neutrally persistent in order to get detail and context of what happened

use scales – on a scale of 1-5 (5 being punching her as hard as you can) how hard did you punch her?

Reflecting back without the minimising e.g. he says “I just slapped her” – reflect back “you slapped her”.

start at higher levels of violence than you believe has been used so that the client then has to work back to the actual level of violence

48Slide49

Feeding back your report to the family

Included

:

Either

Your recommended course of action , which aims to

Reassure everyone’s worst fears (reasonable or not)

Keep everyone safe

To move us from conflict to contact – accepting that at this point in the separation it may only be possible to find a minimally adequate resolution, involving compromise on all sides, but hoping that in time, as the plan settles in and begins to work , a more satisfactory situation can be found

.

or

Explain that due to the complexity and / or possible risk levels, you feel that a more in depth assessment is needed.

49