4.1 Article

Understanding the Impact of a New Approach to the Safeguarding of Children at Risk: An Evaluation Protocol

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTEGRATED CARE
Volume 22, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

UBIQUITY PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.5334/ijic.5980

Keywords

children social care; service change; complex intervention; evaluation protocol

Funding

  1. NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre
  2. NIHR Oxford and Thames Valley Applied Research Collaborative (ARC)
  3. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR Programme Grant for Applied Research)
  4. Health Foundation
  5. NIHR Oxford MedTech and In-Vitro Diagnostics Co-operative
  6. Oxford Martin School

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This paper describes a proposed program of evaluation to examine the impact of the Family Solutions Plus (FSP) approach in child safeguarding services implemented by Oxfordshire County Council (OCC). The evaluation will focus on the support provided to the whole family and aims to reduce the need for foster care. A mixed methods approach, including quantitative analysis of routine data and qualitative interviews with children, families, and staff, will be used to assess the impact of FSP on various aspects including time spent in services, outcomes for children, and long-term effects. The results will be disseminated to a wide audience through various channels.
Introduction: Child Safeguarding Services intervene in situations where a child is at risk of serious emotional or physical harm. The response will vary according to the level of risk, but in serious cases, a child may need to be removed from danger and cared for by foster parents either temporarily or permanently. The number of children being taken into care has increased markedly in recent years in the United Kingdom. Oxfordshire County Council (OCC) is implementing a new approach to the welfare of children (Family Solutions Plus; FSP) in which the focus is to support the whole family and ideally reduce the need for foster care. In this paper, we describe a proposed programme of evaluation to examine the impact of FSP on the time children are in contact with services, the nature of the support provided, experience of children and families, the experience of staff, and longer term outcomes for children, particularly whether they remain within the family or need to be cared for outside the home. Methods and analysis: A mixed methods approach will be taken in an observational retrospective study of children's social care services. Quantitative research will include descriptive analysis on data routinely collected by OCC, examining the effect on time spent in services, outcomes for children and how these outcomes are mediated by family characteristics and circumstances. Qualitative research will be carried out using individual interviews and focus groups with children, families and staff in the teams providing family safeguarding services to capture their experiences with the new model. Ethics and dissemination: This project has been registered with the OCC as a service evaluation. The qualitative studies will seek ethical approval from Oxford University Ethics Committee. A local data sharing agreement will govern the transfer of quantitative data. Results will be disseminated through newsletters, community forums, professional publications and conference presentations to national and international audiences.

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