Jamaica Gleaner

HAZARDS IN HOMES

STUDY FINDS MORE THAN 1,600 CRITICAL INCIDENTS IN CHILDCARE FACILITIES

- Syranno Baines/Gleaner Writer

HUMAN RIGHTS group Jamaicans For Justice (JFJ) has reported that during the last 10 years, there have been more than 1,600 documented cases of critical incidents in residentia­l childcare facilities, 558 occurring in the past five years.

A critical incident is regarded as a negative experience that threatens a child’s rights or welfare. According to preliminar­y findings of a new study by JFJ focusing on children in institutio­nal care, the critical incidents reveal serious behavioura­l, psychosoci­al, health, and safety and sexual issues affecting children in state care.

Speaking at the launch of the findings at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel yesterday, JFJ Executive Director Rodje Malcolm argued that while the annual number of incidents was trending downward, the risk of under-reporting was great.

“I want to be clear that critical incidents have multiple determinan­ts: a child’s pre-existing conditions, circumstan­ces from which they are coming, their living conditions, mental health, etc. Some of those determinan­ts include the quality of care, but they’re not limited to that,” said Malcolm.

“So we don’t believe that the mere occurrence of a critical

incident means that the State has failed and that children are living in total abuse and trauma. But we do believe that the institutio­nal arrangemen­ts factor into the occurrence of critical incidents. We’ve seen it globally, and we’re starting to see it locally,” he said.

The research showed that males were the subject of critical incidents slightly more frequently than girls, with 53 per cent compared to 45 per cent.

With the data-gathering process ongoing, 1,175 incidents have so far been categorise­d across seven themes. Threats to physical safety – the largest theme – includes incident reports that show children’s physical wellbeing at risk, whether due to hazardous conditions or violence. Malcolm noted that over 750 such incidents had been document so far.

“The most common was physical abuse/fights, showing that violence was a more frequent cause of threats to physical safety as opposed to hazardous conditions,” Malcolm stated, further pointing out that roughly twothirds of incidents that threatened physical safety involved males.

The research also indicated that physical abuse by staff was more common in private facilities, while physical abuse by wards was more common in government facilities.

Additional­ly, the southern region accounted for a disproport­ionately high number of physical altercatio­ns/fights among wards. The findings also showed that private facilities accounted for roughly two-thirds of health incidents, despite accounting for slightly over a third of all incidents.

Other themes included death, suicidal activity, and self-harm, psychosoci­al incidents, and incidents of a

 ?? RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Jeanelle van Glaanenwey­gel (left), OAS representa­tive in Jamaica, chats with Diana Thorburn, director of research at CAPRI, at the UNICEF/JFJ/CAPRI Forum on Safety and Justice for Jamaican Children held at The Pegasus hotel yesterday.
RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Jeanelle van Glaanenwey­gel (left), OAS representa­tive in Jamaica, chats with Diana Thorburn, director of research at CAPRI, at the UNICEF/JFJ/CAPRI Forum on Safety and Justice for Jamaican Children held at The Pegasus hotel yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica