Childrens Institutions |
IS THERE A
FUTURE FOR RESIDENTIAL CHILDCARE, OTHER THAN AS A LAST RESORT? The status of the child has changed
considerably during the 20th century, from being the ‘private
property’ of their parents, who could deal with them as they saw fit, to an
individual whose needs and rights are now recognised in law, and whose welfare
can also be transferred to the childcare system set in place within our
society. At the beginning of the century
the poor law saw the needy child to be of least importance by the Board of
Guardians in the application of their ‘deterrent principles.’ Indeed it was not
until 1948, which saw the arrival of the Children’s act, that there was the aim
to introduce, and thus provide, a child centred service. Since the initial
breakthrough in acknowledging that children have rights and needs, each decade
has witnessed the implementation of a major piece of child related legislation.
However, since its establishment residential care for children has always been
viewed as a last resort by all sections of society-or has it? Perhaps the best place to assess
residential child care is 1945, whereby the Curtis Committee was set up to
investigate the existing methods of providing for children who were deprived of
a normal home life with their natural parents.
Furthermore they aimed to suggest what further measures could be taken
to ensure that these children could be brought up under conditions that could
best ‘compensate’ their lost, natural home environment. What this Inquiry
revealed was a variety of statutory services that were of a very uneven
quality, and thus recommended that a single child department should be set up
in each local authority area, which ultimately would be under direct control of
the Home Office. It was the views and recommendations that lead to the 1948
Act, which embodied the key aspects of the report. Even in this early developmental stage of
the child care system, and in the subsequent decade that followed, there was
extensive criticism of the procedures. One of the first steps taken by the new
Children’s Department (which was later to be incorporated into the social
services department) was to look into expanding fostering and preventative
intervention, which did not indicate that the Department had great confidence
in residential child care themselves. Furthermore, the changes within
residential care were somewhat questionable, the Curtis Committee recommended
that staff in homes should be well trained and qualified, but according to critics
such as Packman (1975) this was not ‘completely fulfilled, and lead to
residential workers being labeled as ‘second class.’ This view was already
embedded in the very ethos of the rejection of residential child care-the staff
were not good enough to perform the tasks required of them. If there were criticism leveled at child
care in the 1940s and in preceding years, the 1950s and 60s were critical in
producing ideas and perspectives that lead the majority of society to perceive
residential care in a very negative way, a last resort so to speak. The work of
Guildford (1945) and Spitz are prime examples of
people who helped to shape the negative attitudes held by society, but
perhaps the key theorist of this era was Bowlby (1951).
The core of his work centred around maternal deprivation, which immediately
pointed to residential care, but he further stated that bad residential care
could lead to severely bad effects on the child. These effects included; mental
sub-normality, delinquency, depression, dwarfism, acute distress and
affectionless psychopathy. These
views were presented to the World Health Organisation in 1951, and subsequent
conclusions from his report were based on numerous studies conducted in child
rearing situations, both in a natural and sub famial environment. The
implications were not only clear for children’s institutions, they had a
discernible effect on childcare policy and practice. It was over a decade before the work of
Bowlby really left its mark, the content of the 1963 C.Y.P.A bore the ‘imprint
of Bowlby’s attitude’ and was based on the principle of family support, with
admission to child care seen as a last resort. Of course Bowlby’s work did not
go altogether unchallenged, Rutter (1972) believed that residential care was not ‘inherently damaging,’ but the effects
of the damage depended largely on the quality of the care. However, such
challenges did not interfere with the stigmatisation of harm and negativity
that had attached itself to residential childcare. Indeed
the low value and status placed upon the system was reflected through the legal
system, the 1963 Act embraced the work of Bowlby and the 1969 C.Y.P.A was
pretty much more of the same. It primary aim was to keep children in the
community if at all possible. Criticisms of the system also came from
the field of sociology, largely in the form of Goffman (1961). He categorised institutions into five main
bodies, of which children’s homes were one, and then described how the
individuals that live in them suffered a number of assaults on their
personality. According to Goffman, the ‘assaults’ were; a loss of identity, the
endangerment of physical integrity, a lack of privacy, humiliation and a lack
of authority. The areas of Psychology
and Sociology were hugely influential during this time, and the work of Bowlby
and Goffman,
among many others, produced a climate that was scathing of residential
childcare. However, a number of other factors combined over the following years
to reinforce the negative attitudes which were already extremely evident. The 1970s witnesses a mounting concern
about not only the quality of childcare, but also the quantity, and the concern
was coming from all sections of society. The most obvious area to voice their
concerns were the media, with their interest alerted by the public inquiry into
the death of Maria Colwell in 1973, and sustained by successive scandals.
Colwell’s death raised a host of questions, with the key one being whether she
should have been returned to her natural family after being in care, and
whether having been returned, she should have been regularly monitored by the
local authority. The competence and common sense of those who had made such
decisions were also heavily criticised, and the social worker involved in her
case was even physically attacked in public, a direct consequence of media
coverage. Researchers and workers from within, as
well as outside the child care system became increasingly critical of the lack
of effective planning for children in care, and the effect that such care had
on the children. Studies in the 70s suggested that children in the system were
‘retarded in their personal independence,’ and that a ‘lack of freedom and
overprotection’ lead the child to be ill equipped for independent life in the
outside world. Other studies claimed that children in care were more likely to
exhibit disturbing behaviour and suffer from neurotic disorders than children
who lived with their natural parents. So up until the 1980s the over-riding
climate was one of great negativity, with the central attitude being that
residential childcare was indeed a last resort. Such attitudes were backed up
by studies, which suggested that the system was detrimental and harmful to the
child. Even legislative measures reflected such views, particularly the two
C.Y.P.A Acts of the 1960s. The attitudes were also reinforced in the 1970s by
scandals, which surrounded the system, most notably the Maria Colwell incident,
but an abundance of similar cases followed that incident. Furthermore eve social workers
persistently questioned the value of most residential solutions, not only due
to their own experiences, but also to a growing body of evidence that suggested
the destructiveness of the system. This evidence was not only due to various
sociological and psychological studies, but an increasing number of resident’s
accounts of their own experiences (i.e. Newton 1980 & Deacon 74). Despite the apparent discontent towards
the system, a number of factors did seem to contradict the aura of negativity
that surrounded residential childcare. Primarily, there was a consistent
increase in the number of children under local authority care, despite various
acts whose primary aim was to divert them away from the system. In fact the
number and proportion rose without interruption from the 1960s until the 1980s
(Walton & Elliot). In 1962 there were 63,500 children under the care of the
local authority, by 1971 there were 87,000 and by 1978 the number was well over
100,000,
it was not until the 1980s that the number began to show signs of stabilising.
Secondly, there was an increase in the use of compulsory powers-in 1962 47% of
children were admitted to residential care by the means of a court order, by
1973 the figure was 61%, and by 1980 it was 74%. There
was also a similar growth in the use of POSOs (Place Of Safety Orders). Despite
widespread discontent and the stigma of negativity, the number of children
entering the care system was increasing, and so was the intervention of the
state. In 1984 the Registered Homes Act was
passed, and although primarily concerned with homes for adults, it also
identified certain basic rights for ‘all who find themselves in the care of
others.’ The rights identified were; fulfillment, dignity, autonomy,
individuality, esteem, quality of experience and the expression of emotional
needs among others. The following year witnessed an independent review of
residential care, and the view at that time was an agreement that the system
was of a demoralised state. The report of the Wagner committee was
published in 1988, and acknowledged that changes were needed, but in order for
them to successfully occur, residential care needed to be looked at in a
positive light. It recommended the need for uniformity in terms of the practice
within residential care, and to achieve this it introduced a multi-disciplinary
steering group was established. This
group contained individuals from all sections of society, including local authority,
ADSS, NAYPIC and NCB representatives.
The work carried out by this group took place in a time of unprecedented
activity and concern with childcare issues. However, what measures such as this
achieved is what many hailed as ‘the’ major piece of child legislation to
date-the 1989 Children’s Act. This act, which did not come into force
until October 1991, drew upon a wide range of legal provisions, and signaled
that a more unified approach to the needs of the child was now needed. The act
itself embodied a number of key principles, but what was perhaps most apparent
was its aim to dispel the negativity that had previously surrounded residential
child care by addressing the problems that had been identified. For example,
amongst its principles was the need to ‘actively maintain family links, to
respect attachments, to allow young people in care to develop their own
identities and to adequately prepare them for life after care.’ These three
ideals were all identified to be lacking in the system before the act was
introduced. There were also issues addressed
concerning the way agencies and systems work, integration, planning and the
need for appropriate training for staff were all highlighted as key areas to
work on. A framework of conduct was also implemented, which introduced
complaints procedures and regular inspections of children’s homes. Furthermore
requirements for every children’s home in the country had to be met; a written
statement of purpose, the abolishment of corporal punishment/deprivation of
sleep, written care plans for children, 6 month reviews and an annual medical
examination for every child. The emphasis on ‘proper management and supervision
of homes’ and the need for properly trained staff accompanied these
regulations. What the decade of the 1980s had witnessed
was an aim, by the government, to change the negative attitudes towards
residential childcare into something that should be perceived as a ‘positive
choice,’ a system that was not a last resort. It was acknowledged through the
reports and the Act that the previous system had been very inadequate in
dealing with children, and that the detrimental effects could be reversed by
making a numerous changes. The 1989 Act was of course the key legislative move
in addressing these problems and making the changes necessary to change the
image of residential childcare. The 1990s saw the emergence of many
Inquiries and reports, which related to all aspects that had a bearing on the
childcare system. The first of these was the Pindown Inquiry in 1991, which
documented unacceptable practices in various children’s homes in Staffordshire.
Evidence emerged of cruel regimes in these homes, which were said to deprive
the children of their liberty, and subjected them to ‘social isolation,
humiliation and oppression.’ The recommendations they made were directed
primarily at that local authority, but the report also had implications for
residential childcare nationally, with particular reference to management
training and the protection of the child. The Pindown Inquiry had an immediate
impact at a national level, and Sir William Utting was chosen to carry out a
national review of the system. What this report did was to act as a catalyst
for an increase of interest and concern in the child care system as a whole, as
well as creating national demands for improvements in the way that children in
homes were being looked after. The Utting Report, coupled with two other key
reports produced the same year, for Wales and Scotland respectively (The Welsh
Office 1991 & Skinner 1992) created a far-reaching statement about the
position of the system in England, and introduced ways that it could be
improved. Underpinning these reports was the belief that residential care
should no longer be seen as ‘second best’ or as a ‘last resort,’ used only
after other types of placement have failed. Instead the emphasis was that the
system actually had a crucial role to play within the range of services
available to children. Essentially these three reports set the
national agenda, and their recommendations would be vital in raising the
professional and public status of the service. The fundamental message was that
‘the time was right for residential care to enter a new phase,’ its
transformation would induce the concepts of integral, essential and valuable in
terms of the systems provisions and capabilities. This was not just about the
children, the staff that worked in the system needed to be given full
recognition, and adequate training and support was needed in order to
successfully implement the changes necessary. The
Utting report was vital in channeling the necessary changes, it gave great
recognition to the 1989 Children’s Act in paving the way for a better future
for the residential care system, if it was properly and accurately
implemented. Furthermore, it contained
the argument that although extra resources were a pre-requisite, they were not
the answer to all of the problems. At the end of 1991 the Warner Report,
‘Choosing With Care,’ was published following the trial and conviction of Frank
Beck and others for offences committed against children in a children’s home in
Leicestershire. The Committee was set up in order to assess recruitment and
selection methods for staff who worked in children’s homes, and to recommend
improvements bearing in mind that the protection of the child was the key
aspect to the investigation. The report made many suggestions, including the
‘regular documented supervision sessions between staff and their managers’ and
the ‘annual appraisal of all staff.’ The Ty Mawr Inquiry (1992) followed
closely behind, which aimed to look into incidents in children’s homes of
self-harm and suicide. This again criticised the channels through which staff
were appointed. The
Leicestershire Inquiry was published the following year (1993) and examined the
events which lead to the recruitment of Beck, and the failure at management
level to overlook the abuse he committed over a 13 year period. What this
report, and numerous others that preceded it in the early 1990s, show is that
the managers who are responsible for the children in residential care have
lacked the knowledge and experience, and have made serious misjudgments
regarding the safety of children. These reports did not reveal minor offences,
but serious issues of child abuse, from intimidation to child sex abuse. These
findings would not aid the view of the government, that residential childcare
was no longer seen as a last resort. In spite of these events, the reports made
clear that the need for good residential childcare remained, and that for some
children it was still a first choice. Throughout the 1990s and into 2000 the
government has striven to further improve the quality and standards of residential
childcare, (i.e. Quality Protects Initiative 1998, Children Leaving Care Bill,
2001). The belief that ‘life in a nuclear family, however bad, is superior to
life in a residential community, however good,’ (Richton 1976) seems to be
giving way to a realisation that there may be alternative forms of communal
living which are viable and satisfying, and are no longer a last resort. So
what does the future hold for residential care in terms of its ‘last resort
status?’ Will it shed the negative image that has plagued it through most of
the century? Or will the upsurge in interest and concern, evident throughout
the 1980s and 1990s, and backed up with numerous measures to improve the system
at all levels, shed that negative image of residential care being a last
resort? Perhaps a more relevant question is
whether residential childcare actually has a future at all. Around the time of
the Wagner report some local authorities believed that childcare would diminish
in the near future. Policies introduced by the government were lent heavily
toward encouraging social workers to use fostering and adoption. At the same
time ‘boarding special schools’ were accommodating young people who might have
otherwise been in residential care. This last point was so strongly believed
that it was included in a major piece of research in the early 1990s; ‘Closing
Children’s Homes-An end to residential care.
Indeed as the population of children’s homes declines, the populations of the
boarding special schools increase, and such a link was established in the 1989
Act. To conclude one would suggest that
residential care never recovered from the huge amount of criticisms it
attracted from its establishment in the late 1940s until the end of the 1970s.
Although the start of the 1980s marked an attempt by the Government to change
peoples attitudes through a string of reports, enquiries, recommendations and
the 1989 Act, which dramatically altered the whole system of residential
childcare, it would seem that its use is very much in decline. The question of
its ‘last resort’ tag is lost in whether residential childcare actually has a
future at all. (Approx. 3000 words) REFERENCES BOOKS KAHAN, B. (1985) Growing Up In Groups London (Pp
34-53) Loveday,
S. Reflections On Care (1985) The
Children’s Society: London (Pp
1-13) Packman,
J. Who needs care: Social Work
Decisions About Children (1986) Basil
Blackwell Inc: Oxford (Pp
88-110) Packman,
J. Childcare: Needs And
Numbers (1968) George
Allen Unwin LTD: London (Pp
157-174) ADDITIONAL LITERATURE Baldwin,
N. The Power To Care In Children's
Homes (1990) Gower
Publishing Company: Aldershot, Hants Berridge,
D. Childrens Homes (1985) Basil
Blackwell Inc: Oxford Mann,
P. Children In Care
Revisited-Childcare Policy and Practice (1984) Biddles
LTD: Guilford & Kings Lynn Page,
R. & Clark, G.A WhoCares? -Young People In
Care Speak Out (1977) North
Bourne Press LTD: Coventry Parker,
R. etal Assessing Outcomes In
Childcare (1991) HMSO:
London Prosser,
H. Perspectives On Residential
Care (1976) NFER
Publishing Company: Windsor Schaefer,
C.E. & Swanson, A.J. Children In Residential
Care: Critical Issues In Treatement (1988) Van
Nostrand Reinhold Co: Wokingham Sinclair,
I. & Gibbs, I. Childrens Homes–A Study Of
Diversity (1998) John
Wiley & Sons: JOURNALS BALDRY,S.,
& KEMMIS, J. (1998) Research Note : What it is
like to be looked after by a Local Authority British
Journal of Social Work. Vol : 28, 129-136 Maternal Care and Mental Health, Geneva: World Health Organisation Maternal Deprivation re-assessed, 2nd ed. (1981) Attachment and Loss, Vol : 1 (1949) Asylums. (1961) Who Needs Care. PACKMAN (1986) Pp n.l CLIFFE & BERIDGE (1992) Copyright(C) 2007 - 2025. All rights reserved. |