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Can ‘tracking’
children reduce the harm of poverty?
A national
database containing details of all children – from addresses and
schooling, to what services they and family members have had dealings
with – is being proposed in the Children Bill. It would enable wider
access by professionals to currently restricted information, in
an effort to improve the identification of needs and be able to
provide help more quickly. Eileen Munro assesses the adequacy of
this approach and whether it will make any real difference to the
life chances of children in poverty.
The
Children Bill
Identifying needs
Interpreting information
Identifying the risk of developing problems
Lacking resources to help in all cases
Potential dangers of the database
Conclusion
This
country is still one where life chances are unequal. This damages
not only those children born into disadvantage, but our society
as a whole. We all stand to share the benefits of an economy and
society with less educational failure, higher skills, less crime,
and better health. We all share a duty to do everything we can to
ensure every child has the chance to fulfil their potential.[Footnote
1]
This quote from
the recent Green Paper, Every Child Matters, emphasises the
damage done to children by poverty. The Government goes on to announce
its goal that no children should be ‘prevented by economic disadvantage
from achieving their full potential in life’. This looks like good
news for the three to four million children being brought up in
poverty. Poverty is the biggest single predictor of poor outcomes
for children. As the Government points out in the Green Paper, for
example, by the age of 10, children from a poor background who had
a high developmental score at 22 months have fallen behind children
from richer families who had a low score at 22 months.
The
Children Bill
When
we look at how the Government proposes to achieve its ambitious
goal, however, optimism quickly fades and anxiety grows. The Children
Bill, currently being debated in Parliament, offers no significant
solutions to the devastating impact of poverty but introduces new
measures for monitoring families that look oppressive and intrusive.
The Bill contains
the standard reorganisation of children’s services. This seems a
reflex response to any problem on a local and national level; you
would think that by now the Government might have noticed that none
of the myriad reorganisations have led to significant improvements
for children. There is also a proposal for a Children’s Commissioner
for England, albeit with weaker powers than the Scottish and Welsh
Commissioners who have the authority to start their own investigations.
But the Bill
also includes a proposal that will radically alter the power balance
between families and professionals, an intrusive change that families
on low incomes will experience far more than middle class families,
since they have more contact with services. The Government plans
to remove all families’ rights to confidentiality in their contacts
with teachers, doctors and social workers and to introduce a computerised
national database to ‘track’ children’s development so that professionals
can monitor families, without their consent, and decide if intervention
is needed.
Why should such
a wholesale surveillance system be necessary to help children fulfil
their potential? What grounds are there for deciding we can no longer
trust parents to keep track of their own children’s welfare so that
the State must watch them?
Identifying
needs
The
Government has reached the conclusion that children have been failing
to get the help they need because professionals have not shared
information enough, leading to poor identification of need. Except
in cases of suspected abuse or neglect, doctors, teachers and social
workers have been restricted by parents’ and children’s right to
confidentiality, so the legislation will remove this barrier. A
national database will be set up, containing details of all 11 million
children. In addition to facts such as address, GP and school, the
system will allow professionals to enter a ‘flag of concern’, an
indication to any other professional in contact with a child that
they have some worry about an aspect of the child’s development
or home circumstances. Others can then contact them to discuss the
family in more detail. So, to use an example suggested by the Children’s
Minister Margaret Hodge, a nursery nurse could flag up that she
was concerned that a toddler looked miserable. The child’s GP might
be concerned that the child was underweight, and this system would
enable them to put the two concerns together.
The intention
is to identify children’s needs more quickly and offer help while
the problems are still low level and more amenable to being solved.
Such a result would be impressive and worth achieving but, unfortunately,
it is not likely to be attained because the Government has not addressed
the reasons why children are currently not receiving prompt and
effective help.
Talking about
children’s needs at a general level obscures the fact that there
are several different subgroups of needs that pose significantly
different problems. The following three goals, all included in the
Children’s Green Paper, are all important but distinct:
- Improving
child protection services so that children like Victoria Climbié
receive the help they need.
- Identifying
children at risk of developing seri-ous problems at an earlier
stage when help may be more effective.
- Improving
outcomes for all children so that they do not suffer adverse effects
from the economic or social disadvantages of their birth.
The current
failure of children’s services to provide a high standard of service
on all three goals is due to a mixture of shortages: of skills,
knowledge and resources. A lack of information is, in itself, not
a significant issue.
Take
a look at services to protect children from abuse, an area where
the importance of sharing information has been recognised for 30
years (since the death of Maria Colwell). [Footnote
2] Despite clear policies and procedures for communication,
it still remains a problem and it shows how the issues involved
are far more complicated than the mere technical issue of how data
is moved around.
In the recent
case of Victoria Climbié, many professionals had worrying information
about what was happening to her. When we see all this information
drawn together in the official inquiry report, it looks obvious
that, if it had been put together at an earlier stage, Victoria’s
life could have been saved. But why was it not put together while
she was still alive? There are no restrictions on sharing information
without consent if a professional thinks a child is being abused.
There is a very well developed set of child protection procedures
detailing how the professionals should work together to make a thorough
assessment of a child’s danger. All of the numerous professionals
involved knew each other’s addresses, phone numbers, fax numbers
and email addresses. They knew who to contact and how to communicate.
Interpreting
information
The
crucial problem was that people failed to understand the significance
of the information they had. Victoria’s key social worker failed
to carry out a thorough child protection investigation because she
failed to see that it was necessary. She had classified Victoria’s
needs as primarily for housing, not for protection, and when she
received information suggestive of abuse, she interpreted it in
a benign way and did not register any concern. For instance, the
nurses in the hospital where Victoria had been admitted with injuries
reported that Victoria looked frightened when her great-aunt visited
her on the ward. The social worker interpreted her behaviour as
indicative of the formality and respect that children showed towards
adults in African cultures, hence did not see it as cause for worry.
When the paediatrician reported that the injuries were due to scabies,
the social worker was further reassured.
It is hard to
see how a national database would have improved Victoria’s chances
of being protected. There was an abundance of fragments of information
being shared in the system; there was a lack of competence to interpret
that information. A computer programme cannot rectify this problem;
it requires skilled human beings. Victoria needed a social worker
who had the time to talk to her, the skill to make her feel safe
enough to say what was happening to her, and the knowledge to look
at the broader picture, assess the significance of what was revealed
and decide how to help Victoria.
Identifying
the risk of developing problems
Since
there are already no restrictions on sharing information in cases
of abuse, perhaps the new database will improve the identification
of and response to children in the second category listed above,
those at risk of developing seri-ous problems. It would be wonderful
if we were able to identify and help these children at an early
stage. Not only would they suffer less distress but it would be
likely that their problems would be easier to solve.
With hindsight,
it looks as if we should be able to identify these children earlier.
When you look into the histories of teenagers with serious problems,
you can often see a pattern of numerous minor concerns over the
years, slowly escalating in severity. The trouble is, though, that
we lack the scientific knowledge to pick out this smaller group
from the many thousands of children who show some problems at some
stage in their development but for whom it turns out to be a minor
hiccup, rather than the start of a slide down into serious trouble.
Development
is complex and children with apparently similar circumstances can
turn out radically differently in adulthood. One child’s tough home
life may motivate him to work hard and succeed while another can
react by feeling alienated and hopeless. However comprehensive the
data collected about all children, we cannot predict with reasonable
accuracy which children will develop major difficulties.
Any claim to
be able to predict, for example, which children will become delinquent
needs to be tested rigorously and its level of inaccuracy revealed
because crude predictions can have devastating effects. Innocent
children can be labelled as the delinquents of the future. Besides
the moral repugnance of giving them a bad name before they have
done anything wrong, it carries the danger of being a self-fulfilling
prophecy of people expecting the worst and overreacting to
any slight misbehaviour as proof that the prediction was right.
In practice,
the group of children who go on to develop serious problems cannot
reliably be separated from the larger group of children with minor
problems. We cannot realistically target services at just those
few. One solution to helping them is to help all children who have
problems. This should fit with the Government’s policy since its
third goal listed above is that all children should fulfil their
potential.
But are children
currently not getting help with low level problems because professionals
are not sharing information enough? Is a tracking system and erosion
of confidentiality the answer to better identification of need and
provision of help?
The message
from families is a resounding no. Parents and children themselves
are the ones who generally know first that a problem is developing.
They are better than professionals in recognising a child’s misery.
For them, the problem is not a failure to see the need, or a reluctance
to take help, but a lack of services to turn to. Many parents and
children have the experience of asking for help and being turned
away because their problems are not serious enough yet.
Lacking
resources to help in all cases
With
professionals, the problem is not so much that they fail to identify
need because of lack of information but that they are reluctant
to recog-nise it because they can offer no useful response. Even
when they recognise need, they often fail to refer minor issues
on to the relevant service because they know how high is the threshold
for providing a service. Child psychiatric problems, for instance,
are steadily rising but there is a major shortage of child psychiatrists
and child psychologists in the UK so that even when a child has
become suicidal s/he can face a long wait for an appointment.
Well resourced,
easily accessible services for all families to turn to for help
would improve outcomes for all. They would have a particular impact
on children from low-income families since they face more hazards
than most. Universal services, however, are expensive and this option
does not seem to have been seriously considered by the Government.
Potential
dangers of the database
The
proposed database and abolition of confidentiality are not only
ineffective solutions to the problems in children’s services today
but are sources of new dangers in themselves.
We can expect
that some families will become more reluctant to look for help and
to be honest with professionals, knowing that any sensitive information
they confide to a professional may become common knowledge among
the various services in contact with them.
Teenagers want
privacy as they mature into independent adults. They often also
want advice, so services until now have taken care to offer them
confidentiality. A 15-year-old girl can ask her GP for contraceptive
advice secure in the knowledge that he will respect her privacy.
How many will be deterred knowing that there is no legal obstacle
to this sensitive information being shared with every professional
in their lives?
There has been
a lot of media attention recently on the ruling that a doctor can
carry out an abortion on a girl of 15 without her parents’ knowledge.
While people have been debating whether this is in the girl’s long-term
interests, they have failed to notice that, if the Children Bill
is passed unchanged, then her parents will be the only people in
her life who are kept in the dark: details of the operation could
be shared with every professional with whom she has contact. This
imbalance of information is likely to lead to serious problems in
working with families.
We already have
evidence from maternity services that mothers with postnatal depression
are concealing their problems from health visitors because they
are scared of being reported to the child protection system as an
abusive parent. As another example, will parents with drink problems
be worried about asking a GP for advice, knowing their children’s
schools may get to know about it?
A further danger
is that the system will generate such a deluge of minor concerns
that the time absorbed in screening them will lead to an even greater
shortage of services. Moreover, it is likely that children with
serious problems, such as Victoria Climbié, will be harder to spot
as they are hidden within this torrent of small worries.
Conclusion
Developing
a database to keep track of all children’s development is a proposal
based on an unconvincing argument. It fails to differentiate between
the different categories of need: the parent whose child has severe
learning difficulties and who is crying out for help needs a different
response from the parent who is abusing her/his child and trying
to keep it secret. It is based on the misconception that children
with small problems are not receiving help primarily because their
need is not being identified by professionals when, in reality,
the major problem is that resource shortages mean only serious problems
get attention. It is also based on the misconception that professionals
have the ability to pick out the small number of children with small
problems who will go on to develop major problems later so that
services can remain restricted and can be targeted at the high-risk
group.
A final misconception
is overconfidence in the ability of professionals to solve children’s
problems. Even if we had universal services offering help for every
minor concern, we would have only a limited impact on the devastating
effects of poverty. Our therapeutic efforts are very limited; the
pervasive harm of poverty is hard to neutralise. The Sure Start
schemes, for instance, which are the leading light of current policy,
are not counteracting all the adverse effects that children suffer
from social and economic deprivation.
The Government
wants every child to fulfil his or her potential and is keen to
develop preventive services but, for children living in poverty,
the only true prevention is to end child poverty.
Eileen Munro
is Reader in Social Policy at the London School of Economics and
Political Science
Footnotes
1.
Department for Education and Skills, Every Child Matters,
HMSO, 2003, p6 [back to text]
2. Department of Health and Social Security,
Report of the Committee of Inquiry into the Care and Supervision
Provided in Relation to Maria Colwell, HMSO, 1974 [back
to text]
Poverty 119,
Autumn 2004
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