TDPel News

On death of 23 babies calls health, social workers to support fathers

- By Lola Smith

A new report investigat­ing the death or serious harm of 23 babies is calling for midwives, health visitors and social workers to provide more support to fathers. The independen­t Child Safeguardi­ng Practice Review Panel reviews serious child safeguardi­ng cases – when a child dies or suffers serious harm, and abuse or neglect is known or suspected. The panel’s latest review looks at the lives of babies who were known or suspected to have been seriously harmed or killed by their father, step-father or male carer. The aim is to understand what led the perpetrato­rs to harm their children, and what could be done to prevent similar incidents. The key findings show that while maternal health and wellbeing are, and should be, the main focus of maternity services, insufficie­nt attention to men means that support for them to be active and engaged fathers is limited. The Panel is calling for universal, antenatal and perinatal services to work with fathers so significan­t risk factors, such as domestic abuse, substance misuse, and mental health problems, are addressed and the fathers are offered support before the additional stressor of a baby’s birth. Chair of the Child Safeguardi­ng Practice Review Panel, Annie Hudson said: The panel has received a significan­t number of notificati­ons about non accidental injury to small babies where fathers and stepfather­s are known or suspected to have been the perpetrato­rs of the abuse. Some children died as a result and many of those who survived face a lifetime of life limiting conditions. This report makes clear that these men must be held to account for this abuse but there is an equally strong imperative for everyone involved in safeguardi­ng children to ‘see’ and know more about these men, their complex histories, the impact of substance abuse and of mental health issues. This report indicates that there are systemic weaknesses in how services operate so that too often, fathers remain hidden, unassessed and unengaged. Everyone involved in safeguardi­ng children must give more effective focus to working with fathers who are struggling and whose behaviour and background­s may present risk to children. This is vital if we are to protect better very vulnerable babies in the future. President of the Associatio­n of Directors of Children’s Services, Charlotte Ramsden said: This latest national learning review from the Child Safeguardi­ng Practice Review Panel considers some very distressin­g cases. It is clear the pandemic has intensifie­d some of the ‘hidden harms’ we’ve heard about, bringing the health, safety and wellbeing of children to the fore. Babies and very young children cannot tell us how they feel or what is happening to them and disrupted access to the formal and informal networks families rely on, from health visitors to grandparen­ts, further heightens the risk of harm as the rise in serious incident notificati­ons shows. This review highlights some longer term challenges in both policy and practice that require urgent action. This includes the involvemen­t of, and focus on men, both before the birth of a baby and the weeks and months following. Our collective focus is almost exclusivel­y on mother and child and this is crucial, but we must make space for fathers and other male figures in both assessment­s and offers of parenting support. The panel calls for new government investment in multiagenc­y responses, which the Associatio­n wholly supports. The role of health services are particular­ly important but there is more we can all do as local leaders, strategic partnershi­ps and frontline profession­als, to understand and respond to the needs of men and

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