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by Claire Burns, CELCIS
01 February 2021
Associate feature: More than a promise - the imperative to make change happen

Associate feature: More than a promise - the imperative to make change happen

Making our commitment to The Promise of the Independent Care Review last February was a galvanising moment of hope, drive and purpose for us at CELCIS.

What we didn’t know then was that a force as impactful as a global pandemic would expose the needs and vulnerable situations and contexts of so many across the world.

This crisis has thrown a spotlight on so much of what we already knew: the pandemic was not the cause of poverty, family pressures, isolation, domestic abuse, digital exclusion or any of the other challenges that have attracted increased attention under its spotlight.

The circumstances which cause difficulties and inequalities for families and communities existed before the virus and, unless we take action, they will outlast the virus.

The experiences of the last year have served to further bolster and reinforce the powerful evidence and findings of the Independent Care Review: families want to know that if they need support this can be easily accessed, at an early stage.

That this will include access to practical support (including money) and support for their wellbeing, with opportunities that allow them to support each in their own communities and, where this is not possible, that support is provided through universal services, in ways that don’t feel stigmatising.

The response to the pandemic has created new opportunities to address some of the most fundamental, cultural and structural challenges involved in making the changes we need to see. One of these is the conversation around ‘vulnerability’.

Defined as vulnerable, under the pandemic restrictions some children and families were to get extra support, such as places in school hubs. But what we witnessed is how and why families may not or may not wish to associate themselves as being ‘vulnerable’.

The focus was put on individual families and their children, with the public messaging that schools were closed to all children except for the children of key workers, or who were vulnerable. How then might children and their families have navigated that identification in a way they had never had to before?

Preconceived, pervasive public and political notions and language around the causes of poverty and responsibilities - ‘benefits’ rather than welfare, questions that are framed around parents not being able to feed their children rather than the structures and circumstances that cause such ‘vulnerability’, are wholly stigmatising, with the risk that those who need help and support may not know where to turn to or will do so.

These are important conversations. Fragile family environments can develop anywhere, at any time, to anyone, due to external pressures and inequalities and the pressures of the pandemic are likely to have this impact on many more. The support of family support services needs to be there when people need it.

Despite the vital but upending priority of the need to protect life from the virus, the efforts to improve the support for children, young people and families have continued.

Organisations and decision-makers have readily responded during the crisis, giving new hope for the political will and public support that the fundamental changes of The Promise requires.

There have been examples of greater flexibility and discretion within services for practitioners to circumvent existing bureaucracy, enabling support and services to more immediately help children and families, and empowering people by placing increased trust and autonomy in practitioners to understand and respond quickly to the needs of children and families, has shown just how possible it is to adapt.

We have even more impetus to make real change.

Some changes have worked better for some children, families and services, and there is public will to see change – just look at the public momentum and discourse behind ending food poverty.

We must hold on to that.

Claire Burns is director of CELCIS, the Centre for Excellence for Children’s Care and Protection, a leading innovation and improvement centre. This piece was sponsored by CELCIS. 

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Read the most recent article written by Claire Burns, CELCIS - Associate Feature: How do we hold the hand of the workforce?.

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