The incredible vanishing teenager
Hard to reach young people and ‘agency neglect’
Patrick Ayreemail: [email protected]: http://patrickayre.co.uk
The complexity of the challenge
Young people 14-18 may be Victims, Perpetrators Parents Any combination of the above
but have the same right to be safeguarded as any other child.
The background
National summary of Serious Case Reviews: “The reviews showed that state care did not always support these young people fully and that they experienced ‘agency neglect’” Brandon and others (2008).
The young people
Adolescence marks start of serious problems for many children:
– Onset of mental health issues– Family conflict– Drug use, offending– Sexual activity– Running away
The young people (Brandon and others)
History of rejection, loss and, usually, severe maltreatment
Long term intensive involvement from multiple agencies
Parents: history of abuse and current mental health and substance issues
Difficult to contain in school Typically self-harming and misusing
substances, often self-neglect
The young people (Brandon and others)
Numerous placement breakdowns Running away, going missing Risk of dangerous sexual activity
including exploitation Sometimes placed in specialist
settings, only to be withdrawn because of running away
The young people (My experience)
Long involvement, but not always intense Sometimes few placements, but all wrecked
by the young person Common factor that local services just did
not know what to do with them. ‘By the time of the incident, for many of the
young people, little or help was being offered because agencies appeared to have run out of helping strategies’ (Brandon and others, 2008).
The response
Reluctance to identify mental illness and suicidal intent (CAMHS)
Failure to respond in a sustained way to extreme distress manifested in risky behaviour (sex, drugs, suicide attempts)
Instead of ‘pulling together’, multi-agency response shows fragmentation, ignoring, responsibility shifting, freezing/inertia and generally avoidant behaviour
Reasons for running not addressed adequately
The response
Running away leads to discharge [More generally, does rejection of
services lead to total abandonment?] Age used as a reason for not imposing
services No proper assessment of competence;
allowed/forced to choose; [Dealing with incidents but failing to
recognise patterns]
The obstacles
Hard to get a purchase on the system Wrong children, wrong adults (Ayre, 2000) Acclimatisation Lack of off-the-shelf resources The limited resources are poorly
coordinated and integrated Government targets not child centred or
child driven Different agency agendas and mutual
misunderstanding; falling down the gap
The solutions?
That’s what we are here to explore! Biehal (2005) recommends adolescent
support teams in the community [but is that enough?]
The complexity of the challenge requires flexible collaborative, individualised responses built around the young person
References
Ayre P. and Barrett D. (2000) Young people and prostitution: An end to the beginning?, Children and Society 14, 48-59
Biehal, N. (2005) Working with Adolescents: Supporting Families, Preventing Breakdown, London: BAAF.
Brandon, M, Belderson, P, Warren, C, Howe, D, Gardner, G, Dodsworth J and Black J (2008) Analysing child deaths and serious injury through abuse and neglect: what can we learn? London: Department for Children, Schools and Families