The Scotsman

Growing concern over children left home alone during school holidays

- By ANGUS HOWARTH

Parents are being urged to think carefully about whether their child can be left home alone, as figures suggest that more people are raising concerns about youngsters being left during the school holidays.

The NSPCC said it received more than 1,200 calls and emails last summer about children being left unattended – up around a third on the previous year.

By law, there is no minimum age at which a child can be left alone, but parents can be taken to court for neglect if a child is at risk of suffering or injury.

Childcare pressures can 0 By law, there is no minimum age at which a child can be left make the summer holidays a stressful time for parents and carers, the NSPCC said, and deciding whether a child can be left is a difficult decision.

Between July and September last year, the charity’s 24-hour helpline received 1,294 calls and emails from UK adults asking questions or raising concerns about youngsters being left alone.

This is up from 949 contacts during the same period in 2015, the charity said.

Some of the calls and emails received last year were from people asking for guidance on when a child can be left unattended, but 83 per cent were considered so serious by the NSPCC they were passed on to the police or social services.

In some cases, people reported youngsters being left alone overnight, or young children being left to feed themselves, the charity said.

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