Yorkshire Post

Alert over increase in children suffering from abuse

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THE NUMBER of referrals of children believed to be living with domestic abuse has risen by a quarter in a year, NSPCC figures show.

The child protection charity passed on 6,642 concerns from its helpline advisers about children they suspected to be living in homes with domestic abuse in 2019.

This is up 25 per cent from the previous year, when 5,322 referrals were made following calls from the public and profession­als concerned about a child.

Of last year’s referrals, around 10 a day (3,786 over the year) were made to children’s services which have no legal duty to provide specialist services for children who experience domestic abuse.

More than half (57 per cent) of referrals were made to children’s services, 42 per cent to police forces and one per cent to other agencies.

The NSPCC is calling for the Government to make local authoritie­s and agencies legally obliged to provide support for children who experience domestic abuse. This would help profession­als protect children at risk and ensure there are specific services available to help young people overcome trauma, it says.

Without this legal duty, it warns that the new Domestic Abuse Bill risks failing children who are living in households that are affected.

Emily Hilton, NSPCC senior policy and public affairs officer, said: “Domestic abuse creates a corrosive environmen­t at home which can put children at huge risk of physical and emotional harm, as well as affecting their long-term mental health.

“Our helpline is increasing­ly having to raise the alarm with local authoritie­s about children living with domestic abuse.

“But without legal recognitio­n of the impact domestic abuse has on children and a duty on local authoritie­s to provide support services, the help they need is just not in place.”

More than a quarter of a million children in England are estimated to be living with domestic abuse.

Jess, who is in her early 20s and from Wales, said she will be affected for the rest of her life after her family experience­d years of domestic abuse from her father.

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