Jamaica Gleaner

Major increase in Portland boys calling SafeSpot for help

- Ainsworth Morris/ Staff Reporter

LAST YEAR, there was a major spike in the number of boys from Portland, who, on a monthly basis, contacted the Office of the Children’s Advocate (OCA) through its SafeSpot helpline, raising a red flag regarding the need for more child-protection services to be offered in that parish.

After a recent review of contacts made to the two-year-old helpline, it was recognised that there was a major increase in boys calling or sending WhatsApp messages for help from Portland in the year 2022. The boys from Portland also topped the ‘concerns about self’ category of callers by gender and parish.

There were 113 males who called for help from Portland, while there were nine females and one unknown gender. This follows St Andrew and Kingston with the highest number of male callers, totalling 370 and 291, respective­ly.

This raised concerns for not only Children’s Advocate Diahann Gordon Harrison, but other profession­als in the child protective services industry as well.

It was Gordon Harrison who revealed the data on the findings from the calls to SafeSpot in 2022 during a media briefing last Wednesday at the Terra Nova All Suite Hotel in St Andrew.

“For ‘concerns about self’ – this has to do with needing external validation, self-esteem issues, self-worth, confidence, and so on – Portland is in the lead, and interestin­gly, it’s the males who are saying they have concerns about themselves, followed by St Catherine, which doesn’t seem to want to be left out of the statistics at all, with the females coming in very strongly as having concerns about themselves,” Gordon Harrison said.

“Portland is the only parish where we had more boys reaching out than girls. We had 113 boys reaching out from Portland in comparison to only nine girls. That’s an interestin­g disaggrega­tion. Sometimes we say that children in the urban centres reach out a little bit more, but Portland is showing a little bit of a dissonance we generally anticipate,” she said.

She also noted that youth ages 16 and 17 were most prominent among those who contacted SafeSpot in 2022. The other prominent groups are the 13- to 15-year-old children, followed by the 10- to 12-year-old children. She also expressed concern about the number of boys who reached out from the capital city.

“In Kingston, we had 177 boys, which is very interestin­g because it shows a spike in the number of boys that are certainly reaching out from Kingston, but of course, not to be outdone, we had 291 girls,” she said.

On the other hand, Gordon Harrison also noted that there were no males from St Catherine who called about “fear and anxiety problems”, but females from St Catherine were disproport­ionately represente­d.

Two other startling revelation­s were that all contactors to SafeSpot from St Thomas were females, totalling 21 girls, and 446 girls from St Catherine reached out through calls, WhatsApp messages, and other online communicat­ion for help in 2022, resulting in the parish with the highest number of girls making contact per parish last year and topping the number of callers in the ‘concerns about self’ category.

‘Portland is the only parish where we had more boys reaching out than girls. We had 113 boys reaching out from Portland in comparison to only nine girls. That’s an interestin­g disaggrega­tion. Sometimes we say that children in the urban centres reach out a little bit more, but Portland is showing a little bit of a dissonance we generally anticipate.’

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica