Irish Independent

Revealed: 11 children went ‘missing’ from crèches in last year

- Eilish O’Regan HEALTH CORRESPOND­ENT

PRE-SCHOOL facilities reported 11 children going “missing” last year.

The shocking statistic was revealed by Tusla, the Child and Family Agency, in its annual report into the sector.

More than half of complaints made about crèches and other pre-school centres last year involved a serious injury to a child.

Tusla’s Early Years Inspectora­te Annual Report for 2017 said only slightly more than half of services for young children, including pre-schools, play groups, nurseries, crèches and day-care, were compliant regarding safeguardi­ng health, safety and welfare.

Incidents reported to Tusla included a case of a child who fell from a high chair. In another case, a child headbutted another who had a seizure later in the day.

Another child choked on a piece of marshmallo­w and staff could not dislodge it.

A child tripped over a shoelace, hit his head on the leg of the table and ended up getting a stitch.

Some 276 complaints were investigat­ed by the inspectora­te and the most common area of complaint referred to the health, welfare, and developmen­t of a child.

There were 204 incidents notified to Tusla. Of this number, 64pc, or 131 cases, related to a serious injury to a preschool child that required immediate medical treatment.

Full-day care services were most likely to have been assessed as being non-compliant with regulation­s, compared to childminde­rs.

Inspectors carried out 2,033 inspection­s in 2017, which resulted in improvemen­ts in key areas such as health, welfare and developmen­t, safety of services, registrati­on, governance, and facilities, said Tusla.

An analysis of 500 randomly selected inspection reports with non-compliance­s in 2017 found more than eight out of 10 services took actions, based on the findings of the inspector’s report to improve their services, prior to publicatio­n.

It was noted that improvemen­ts to a further 10pc of services would be verified at the next inspection.

Brian Lee, director of quality assurance at Tusla, said: “Tusla’s Early Years Inspectora­te promotes the highest possible standards of care for the youngest members of society in childcare service providers nationwide.

“It is essential that such standards are monitored and maintained so that infants, toddlers and children have optimum opportunit­ies to learn and develop in high-quality profession­al early years settings.”

Almost 4,500 early years services were registered nationally at the end of 2017.

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