Utilisateur
Identifying children who are suffering or are likely to suffer significant harm.
The threshold for local authority intervention to protect a child from abuse or neglect.
Crucial for effective assessment, planning, and service delivery to protect children.
Provide a detailed framework for inter-agency cooperation to safeguard children.
Ensure children are taught how to stay safe online and understand risks.
Child Death Review Partners, including the local authority and clinical commissioning groups.
Children's social care, working with other agencies as required.
Reporting to the police and initiating appropriate risk assessments and searches.
Neglect, physical, emotional, and sexual abuse.
At least every six months, with the first review within three months.
To support practitioners, reflect on cases, and ensure good practice standards are met.
Multi-agency collaboration to identify, disrupt, and prevent exploitation.
Regular, up-to-date, and relevant to their role and the level of contact they have with children.
The local authority children's social care services.
The welfare of the child is paramount in all decisions and actions taken.
All organizations and individuals who work with or come into contact with children.
Children being coerced or manipulated into criminal activity by others.
Share necessary information where there is a clear purpose and legal basis.
Is unlikely to achieve or maintain a reasonable standard of health or development without assistance.
When there is a concern that a child is suffering or likely to suffer significant harm.
The Child Safeguarding Practice Review Panel or the local safeguarding partners.
Promote transparency, share learning, and improve safeguarding arrangements nationally and locally.
Resolve professional disagreements constructively to ensure the child's needs are met.
An independent chair, usually employed by the local authority but independent of case management.
Identify learning opportunities from serious cases to improve future safeguarding practice.
Coordinating and ensuring the effectiveness of local safeguarding arrangements.
Safeguarding is seen as everyone's responsibility and a shared commitment.
Investigating allegations of crime against children and protecting child victims.
Protecting children from maltreatment and enabling optimal outcomes for their lives.
Holding agencies to account for their safeguarding performance.
To coordinate support, be a single point of contact, and reduce duplication for families.
An arrangement for a child under 16 (or 18 if disabled) to be cared for by someone who is not a close relative for 28 days or more.
A multi-agency approach to assess a child's needs and provide coordinated early support.
When a child dies or suffers serious harm and abuse or neglect is known or suspected.
Following a Child Protection Conference where it is agreed a child is at risk of significant harm.
Determine whether the local authority should take steps to safeguard a child.
Learn lessons to prevent future child deaths and promote child safety.
Having a Designated Safeguarding Lead (DSL) and appropriate policies.
To bring together family members and professionals to make decisions about a child's safety.
Manage child protection referrals and ensure staff receive appropriate safeguarding training.
