Family/Whānau Caregiver Assessment and Approval Engaging with families to achieve better outcomes for children and young people
Feb 02, 2016
Family/Whānau Caregiver Assessment and Approval Engaging with families to achieve better outcomes for children and young people
What the workshop looks like
Today’s workshop gives us an opportunity for:
> Further discussion and questions about the new family/whānau caregiver assessment and approval process
> Deciding how we’ll undertake family/whānau searching > How to undertake a family/whānau caregiver assessment> Using the Three Houses and Core Needs of Children to inform/guide
discussions during the family/whānau caregiver assessment hui> Development of a site action plan – where to from here for staff?
When children and young people can’t stay with their parents> As a companion to the new family/whānau caregiver assessment process, a key
information has been developed to guide social workers in situations when it is not safe for the child to remain with their parents but where a safe placement can be located for them without Child, Youth and Family needing to secure custody through the Family Court
> Even when a child is not in the Chief Executive’s custody Child, Youth and Family still has a responsibility to ensure the people taking on the care of the child or young person are the people who will best met their needs and keep them safe
> This key information outlines the minimum requirements for assuring safety as well as ideas on how to manage concerns and support the placement
> This key information will be discussed in more detail later in this workshop
The new family/whānau caregiver assessment process
These parts will be familiar to you as we already do them:
> Safety checks – Police, CYRAS, TRIM, ID, referees, medical, home visit
> Assessment report
> Approval delegations for convictions
These parts of the process are new:
> Family/whānau caregiver assessment hui
> Stronger focus on supporting the placement
> Roles of the child’s social worker and caregiver social worker
> Self-assessment for prospective caregivers
> Provisional approval
Which assessment process?
From March 2012 Child, Youth and Family will have distinct caregiver
assessment pathways for non-family/whānau (Ways to care) and family/whānau
It will usually seem really clear which assessment process best fits a particular
situation, but in others it may be more difficult. When unsure consider the following: > Do the child or young person’s parents think of the prospective caregiver as
family/whānau?> Does the child or young person think of the prospective caregiver as
family/whānau?> Use your professional judgement, consult with your supervisor and record the
rationale for your decision
Key Information: Which caregiver assessment process do I use?
provides more guidance.
Family/whānau assessment hui
> Brings together the prospective family/whānau caregivers, other family members (including the child or young person and their parents) and the child or young person’s social worker to discuss the suitability and capability of the prospective caregivers to provide safe care
> Is held as a stand-alone meeting or following another family gathering (e.g. family group conference)
> Largely replaces the existing interview process (although additional interviews are completed outside of the hui when concerns or sensitive issues arise)
> Information for medical and referee checks is gathered during the assessment hui
> The Three Houses can be used to guide discussions and help everyone to stay focussed on safe care for the child or young person
VULNERABILITIES
Extended family/whānau support(paternal and maternal)
Knowledge of child’s needs(understanding of the child)
Previous experiences(prospective caregiver’s own
background and of providing care)
STRENGTHS
Extended family/whānau support(paternal and maternal)
Knowledge of child’s needs(understanding of the child)
Previous experiences(prospective caregiver’s own
background and of providing care)
NEXT STEPS
How will the care arrangement be supported(e.g. any training, material
needs, special needs of the child or young person,
contact with other family/whānau members)
Su
pp
ort n
eeds, ag
encies
Co
mm
un
ity – inclu
din
g w
ork
Frien
ds/P
eers
Family/Extended FamilyFamily/Extended Family
Co
mm
un
ity – inclu
din
g w
ork
Adapted by OCSW for use with prospective family/whānau caregivers (April 2010, Child, Youth and Family)
THE THREE HOUSES
Supporting the placement
> A support package for the placement is developed during the assessment hui which will identify what will help the prospective caregivers best support and care for the child or young person
> This support package is written up and included in the caregiver assessment report
> The support package is reviewed as part of the review of the child’s case plan (see the Caring for Children and Young People policy) i.e. every three months
> Caregiver reviews continue as per the Caregiver Support and Review policy
Roles and responsibilities
> Family/whānau caregiver assessments are led by the child or young person’s social worker
> Someone other than the child’s social worker facilitates the family/whānau assessment hui
> The child or young person’s social worker writes up the assessment report > The caregiver social worker provides ongoing support to the caregiver from the
point of approval > Depending on their availability, the caregiver social worker can become involved
in the assessment process at an earlier stage (i.e. to attend the assessment hui and/or assist with completion of assessment tasks)
> Roles around who completes which tasks in an out-of-area caregiver assessment situation are clearly defined
Self-assessment for prospective caregivers> As part of the assessment process, the prospective family/whānau caregiver
completes a self-assessment which helps identify their strengths and needs as well as their expectations and responsibilities as caregivers for Child, Youth and Family
> The prospective caregiver is provided with a copy of the Caregiver Handbook at the beginning of the caregiver assessment process and given whatever assistance they require in order to complete their self-assessment
> The family/whānau member will not be considered for approval until they have returned their completed self-assessment
Provisional approval
> Replaces ‘emergency approval’> Only occurs in exceptional situations where a family/whānau member has been
identified as the best placement for a child and there is a need for this placement to occur with some urgency
> Requires completion of safety checks – Police, CYRAS, ID and home visit – and supervisor approval
> Provisional approval is not granted if the family/whānau member’s criminal history or CYRAS record suggests the placement may not keep the child safe
> The family/whānau assessment hui is held within 5 working days of provisional approval
> Full approval will be granted within 20 working days following the assessment hui
After today …
This policy comes into effect from March 2012
This workshop will help you become more familiar with the policy, key information documents and resources and also determine who will do what on site.
Let’s take a closer look …
Swim lanes diagramSafe caring for children and young peopleK
ey D
ocum
ents
Pro
cess
Dec
isio
nP
roce
ss
Report of concern
Family/whānau agreement
Family group conference
Court
Assessment of safe care
arrangements (when no custody
to the CE)
Family/whānau caregiver
assessment and approval policy
Non-family/whānau caregiver assessment and approval policy
Caregiver assessment
(custody to the CE)
Alternative care needed
Placement needed
KI: Identifying safe care solutions
when children and young people can’t
stay at home
Police, CYRAS/ TRIM, home visit, discussion with
prospective caregivers
Police, CYRAS/ TRIM, referees,
medical, home visit, assessment hui, self-
assessment, other interviews
Police, CYRAS/ TRIM, referees,
medical, home visit, interview/s, 3 day
training
CFA / Investigation--------------------------------------------- Safety Full assessment assessment
Intervention
The family/whānau documents
The family/whānau caregiver assessment and approval policy
Key Information: > Identifying safe care solutions for children and young people when they can’t
stay at home> Which caregiver assessment process should I use?> Undertaking the family/whānau caregiver assessment> Incorporating the core needs of children and young people into the caregiver
assessment process
Resources: > Self-assessment for caregivers> Family/whānau caregiver assessment report> Family/whānau caregiver assessment flowchart
Needs of children and young people in care
>What do children and young people coming into care need?
>What are we looking for from family/whānau caregiversSpecifically think about knowledge and qualities you would want to see
>How will we evidence this?
Completing the assessment hui
> Understanding the difference between the assessment hui and other meetings
> Who will we invite to the assessment hui and how will we find them
> How we will use the Three Houses in the assessment hui
Practice Session
> The Core Needs of Children – case study
Working collaboratively
The assessment process is led by the child or young person’s social worker, irrespective of whether they are a care and protection or youth justice client.
It’s important that we work collaboratively on this site to support each other and complete safe caregiver assessments for children and young people.
> How will we do this on site?> Who on site can/will facilitate the assessment hui?> How will sites utilise the expertise of caregiver social workers when completing
family/whānau caregiver assessments?> What skills might staff members need to further develop in order to complete this
work?
Develop an action plan to ensure there is a shared understanding on site about how the process will take effect from March 2012