Frontline practitioners in key worker positions are currently finding themselves overworked, time poor and confused while working under unprecedented circumstances.In an attempt to alleviate the pressure child protection professionals are under, the AoCPP podcast was born.There has never been a more important time to keep up with child protection and safeguarding news. But with government regulation changing daily, we realise not all frontline professionals have the time to do so. That’s why we’ve created this podcast – to give you what you need to stay informed.
In our special episodes, we take a more focused look at a singular issue that child protection professionals need to know about. These are often specific and urgent – so we’ll be talking with a professional at the forefront of the issue.
...
The Association of Child Protection Professionals is a registered charity and membership association. We provide education and professional development opportunities for those working in child protection.Our mission is to improve the lives and safety of children by working with those in the sector to provide research, representation, training, and support.
If you'd like to know more about us, visit: childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Or if you have any enquiries, email us at: hello@aocpp.org.uk
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Frontline practitioners in key worker positions are currently finding themselves overworked, time poor and confused while working under unprecedented circumstances.In an attempt to alleviate the pressure child protection professionals are under, the AoCPP podcast was born.There has never been a more important time to keep up with child protection and safeguarding news. But with government regulation changing daily, we realise not all frontline professionals have the time to do so. That’s why we’ve created this podcast – to give you what you need to stay informed.
In our special episodes, we take a more focused look at a singular issue that child protection professionals need to know about. These are often specific and urgent – so we’ll be talking with a professional at the forefront of the issue.
...
The Association of Child Protection Professionals is a registered charity and membership association. We provide education and professional development opportunities for those working in child protection.Our mission is to improve the lives and safety of children by working with those in the sector to provide research, representation, training, and support.
If you'd like to know more about us, visit: childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Or if you have any enquiries, email us at: hello@aocpp.org.uk
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In today's episode Steve Myers, Vice-Chair of the AoCPP, is speaking to Dr Rob Ewin about interview practices in policing. They'll be discussing how the specialism has evolved, the importance of continued research within the area, and the best practice all child protection and adult safeguarding professionals can take from it.
Dr Rob Ewin's route to his current role was neither quick nor easy, what started out as a community volunteer role, then turned into a Special Constable role which subsequently led him to undertake a foundation degree in Policing at the University of Cumbria. Soon after, Rob topped up his degree to eventually receive a BSc in Professional Policing, while simultaneously working to become a Police Officer at Cumbria Constabulary. Rob later joined the Criminal Investigation Department where he completed many successful cases, but through this, he continued to study - undertaking a few modules of a Master's degree, but ultimately undertaking a PhD looking at the complex problems facing vulnerable people. It is this balance between academic research and practical experience that has been a longstanding component of Dr Ewin's career and subsequently led him to his current role, T/ Detective Inspector and Head of Learning and Development for the Cumbria Constabulary. Rob now works on complex investigations including murder, rape and human trafficking, while supporting his Constabulary in their professional development - with a focus on facilitating evidence-based practice. But despite how his career has developed, he carries with him the lessons he learned within his first role, the value of difference, diversity, hardship and loss.
Steve Myers is the former Director of Social Sciences at the University of Salford, and a registered Social Worker with a background in child protection and youth justice. He has worked in both statutory and voluntary organisations and has been involved with the training of social workers in Higher Education for the past 25 years. Steve has researched and written about strengths-based and solution focused practice, and has a interest in working with violent behaviour including sexual violence.
...
We started this podcast at the beginning of lockdown to support professionals continuing to work with vulnerable children, and families, under unprecedented circumstances.
With the goal of alleviating the pressure professionals are under, we’ve brought together leading experts within research and practice share their knowledge of the latest issues in child protection and adult safeguarding.
Two years later, we want to hear from YOU about what you would like to hear in upcoming episodes.
Whether it’s a particular topic you want discussed, or a particular person you want invited on the show. We want to ensure that the podcast reflects what you need.
So feel free to email us at hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk with any suggestions.
And if you’ve been enjoying listening to this podcast - please rate, review and subscribe as it helps other child protection professionals find us.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Find Dr Rob Ewin at:
Twitter:@RobEwin1
...
Music by Alexander King
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today's episode is a Child Abuse Review Special where we hear from researchers, academics and practitioners who've published articles in Child Abuse Review, as well as the editorial team behind the journal.
In this episode Helen Wilson, Operations Manager at the Association of Child Protection Professionals, talks to Prof Kish Bhatti-Sinclair and Dr Lisa Bunting about their first 7 months as Co-editors, what to expect in the future, and how to get involved with the journal.
Professor Kish Bhatti-Sinclair is Head of Social Work and Social Care at the University of Chichester. She is known for her work on social work, race and racism and is particularly interested in ethnically sensitive research methodologies and theories, such as modern racism, which test discriminatory attitudes and behaviours.
Kish has worked on commissioned evaluation projects which have enabled her to make recommendations directly to child protection agencies and has led on a number of publications which have questioned professional ideologies and beliefs, responses to child abuse within Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic families, cultural racism, anti-Muslim racism and Islamophobia.
Dr Lisa Bunting is a Senior Lecturer in Social Work at Queen’s University, Belfast. Lisa has worked in the field of child welfare and child protection research for the past two decades and has specific interests in the impact of childhood adversity and the development of trauma informed children’s services. She has recently led on the first national prevalence survey of mental health problems and trauma exposure among Northern Ireland youth and, together with colleagues at Queen’s, has conducted a rapid evidence review of system-wide trauma informed care implementation to inform the regional roll-out of the NI Safeguarding Board’s Trauma Informed Initiative. She is currently working on analysis of children’s social care data to identify trends in the relationship between area level deprivation, involvement with child protection social work, and patterns of repeated service use over time.
...
We started this podcast at the beginning of lockdown to support professionals continuing to work with vulnerable children, and families, under unprecedented circumstances.
With the goal of alleviating the pressure child protection professionals are under, we’ve brought together leading experts within research and practice to impart their knowledge of the latest issues in child protection and safeguarding.
Eighteen months and thousands of downloads later, we want to hear from YOU about what you would like to hear in upcoming episodes.
Whether it’s a particular topic you want discussed, or a particular person you want invited on the show. We want to ensure that the podcast reflects what you need.
So feel free to email us at hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk with any suggestions.
And if you’ve been enjoying listening to this podcast - please rate, review and subscribe as it helps other child protection and adult safeguarding professionals find us.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Find out more about Child Abuse Review here: https://www.childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk/child-abuse-review/
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10990852
...
Music by Alexander King
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In today's episode Penny Earney, Director of the Association of Child Protection Professionals introduces our Special Interest Group (SIG) focusing on Children and Young People in Care and Care Experienced. Wendy is joined by the SIG Chair Penny Earney, former Designated Nurse for Looked After Children and Care Leavers andl the Chair of the AoCPP’s Children and Young People in Care and Care Experienced SIG, is joined by Rebekah Pierre to discuss her lived experience of unregulated placements and what needs to change.
Rebekah Pierre is a care-experienced social worker and author, who currently works for the British Association of Social Workers. She has written extensively about the care system, featuring in The Guardian, The Independent, Radio 4 & others. Rebekah's lived experience is central to her campaign work; her peer-reviewed journal, 'Revisiting Diary Entries from Care: An Exposition of the Challenges of Unregulated Placement Settings', examines her childhood diary extracts from an autoethnographic perspective, linking lived experience to wider policy failures. She represented the #KeepCaringto18 campaign at Downing Street earlier this year and is passionate about equality of care for all children. Follow Rebekah at @RebekahPierre92 on Twitter.
Penny Earney has experience of working with families and vulnerable children, both clinically and strategically within health, over the last 40 years building a wealth of expertise, competencies, knowledge and skills.
Her experience of working strategically as a NHS Designated Nurse, has developed a passion and focus to be able to scrutinise quality assurance within the constant challenging and changing landscape of complex vulnerability for children and families. Her drive to actively seek the voice of children within the care system and care experience young people, hear what they were saying and asking, resulted in a successful business case being awarded 7K to commission health provision required to improve and sustain health outcomes and experiences of looked after children and care leavers within Dorset.
Having retired from her substantive NHS role in December 2020, she is now working as an independent specialist health practitioner, continuing her passion for improving and sustaining effective service delivery to support vulnerable children and families.
...
We started this podcast at the beginning of lockdown to support professionals continuing to work with vulnerable children, and families, under unprecedented circumstances.
With the goal of alleviating the pressure professionals are under, we’ve brought together leading experts within research and practice share their knowledge of the latest issues in child protection and adult safeguarding.
Two years later, we want to hear from YOU about what you would like to hear in upcoming episodes.
Whether it’s a particular topic you want discussed, or a particular person you want invited on the show. We want to ensure that the podcast reflects what you need.
So feel free to email us at hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk with any suggestions.
And if you’ve been enjoying listening to this podcast - please rate, review and subscribe as it helps other child protection professionals find us.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
...
Music by Alexander King
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In today's episode Wendy Thorogood, Director of the Association of Child Protection Professionals introduces our Special Interest Group (SIG) focusing on Children and Young People in Care and Care Experienced. Wendy is joined by the SIG Chair Penny Earney.
Penny Earney has experience of working with families and vulnerable children, both clinically and strategically within health, over the last 40 years building a wealth of expertise, competencies, knowledge and skills.
Her experience of working strategically as a NHS Designated Nurse, has developed a passion and focus to be able to scrutinise quality assurance within the constant challenging and changing landscape of complex vulnerability for children and families.She has worked within a wide cross over of specialities and disciplines within the NHS, social care, education and the wider voluntary and private sector. Her drive to actively seek the voice of children within the care system and care experience young people, hear what they were saying and asking, resulted in a successful business case being awarded 7K to commission health provision required to improve and sustain health outcomes and experiences of looked after children and care leavers within Dorset.
Having retired from her substantive NHS role in December 2020, she is now working as an independent specialist health practitioner, continuing her passion for improving and sustaining effective service delivery to support vulnerable children and families.
Wendy Thorogood is a retired Designated Nurse Consultant for children with NHS Dorset Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) based in Dorchester.
Wendy delivered the national leadership programme for safeguarding for the Department of Health and worked directly with the NHS Confederation in relation to current changes ;providing assurance that current and future providers of services are compliant in relation to safeguarding national and local standards;working with Lead Commissioners and the performance team to develop agreed key performance indicators and safety metrics for providers;identifying and taking appropriate action on key risks and issues across commissioned services that may affect safeguarding of children, young people.
...
We started this podcast at the beginning of lockdown to support professionals continuing to work with vulnerable children, and families, under unprecedented circumstances.
With the goal of alleviating the pressure child protection professionals are under, we’ve brought together leading experts within research and practice to impart their knowledge of the latest issues in child protection and safeguarding.
Two years and thousands of downloads later, we want to hear from YOU about what you would like to hear in upcoming episodes.
Whether it’s a particular topic you want discussed, or a particular person you want invited on the show. We want to ensure that the podcast reflects what you need.
So feel free to email us at hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk with any suggestions.
And if you’ve been enjoying listening to this podcast - please rate, review and subscribe as it helps other child protection professionals find us.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Find out more about Wendy at: https://www.childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk/wendy-thorogood
...
Music by Alexander King
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today's episode is a Child Abuse Review Special where we hear from researchers and academics who've published articles in our Journal.
In this episode Wendy Thorogood, Chair of the Association of Child Protection Professionals talks to Dr Lauren Lines about her research paper recently published in our journal, Child Abuse Review, titled ‘Constructing a Compelling Case: Nurses’ Experiences of Communicating Abuse and Neglect’.
Dr Lauren Lines (RN, BNhons, MN, PhD) is a Lecturer in the College of Nursing and Health Sciences at Flinders University, Australia. Lauren has a paediatric nursing background, working for almost 10 years in paediatric acute care. At present, Lauren teaches both undergraduate and postgraduate specialist paediatric/child health nursing. Lauren’s PhD (2020) explored nurses' experiences of addressing child abuse in Australian child-focused settings. Lauren’s current research - the Safeguarding Project (funded by Flinders Foundation Health Seed Grant) - is identifying the nature and scope of Australian nursing and midwifery roles in a public health approach to preventing and responding to child abuse and neglect.
Wendy Thorogood is a retired Designated Nurse Consultant for children with NHS Dorset Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) based in Dorchester. She trained at St Guy's hospital in London, specialising in child and adult nursing intensive care and cardiac and renal transplants.
Wendy delivered the national leadership programme for safeguarding for the Department of Health and worked directly with the NHS Confederation in relation to current changes ;providing assurance that current and future providers of services are compliant in relation to safeguarding national and local standards;working with Lead Commissioners and the performance team to develop agreed key performance indicators and safety metrics for providers;identifying and taking appropriate action on key risks and issues across commissioned services that may affect safeguarding of children, young people.
...
We started this podcast at the beginning of lockdown to support professionals continuing to work with vulnerable children, and families, under unprecedented circumstances.
With the goal of alleviating the pressure child protection professionals are under, we’ve brought together leading experts within research and practice to impart their knowledge of the latest issues in child protection and safeguarding.
Eighteen months and thousands of downloads later, we want to hear from YOU about what you would like to hear in upcoming episodes.
Whether it’s a particular topic you want discussed, or a particular person you want invited on the show. We want to ensure that the podcast reflects what you need.
So feel free to email us at hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk with any suggestions.
And if you’ve been enjoying listening to this podcast - please rate, review and subscribe as it helps other child protection professionals find us.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Find out more about Wendy at: https://www.childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk/wendy-thorogood
Find out more about Lauren at: https://www.flinders.edu.au/people/lauren.lines
...
Music by Alexander King
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
It's International Men's Day 2021, and to commemorate it Steve Myers, Trustee of the Association of Child Protection Professionals is talking to Lee Sobo-Allen and Professor Jonathan Scourfield about working with men and fathers in child protection and safeguarding.
Lee Sobo-Allen is a Senior Lecturer in Social Work with previous experience as a qualified social worker in child protection, children with disabilities and adults with learning disabilities. His research interests includes social work engagement with fathers. After qualifying as a social worker at the University of Manchester in 1998, Lee worked in the areas of child protection, children with disabilities and adults with learning disabilities. It was during this time that he developed an interest in, and knowledge of, the need to engage with fathers in childcare social work as both a risk and a resource. This interest has continued in his studies, and in his teaching in social work education at a number of universities. Lee is currently undertaking a PhD at Leeds Beckett University where he is currently exploring the engagement of non-resident fathers by social workers as potential alternative carers for their children.
Jonathan Scourfield is Professor of Social Work in Cardiff University, where he has worked for 25 years. He is Deputy Director of CASCADE, the Children's Social Care Research and Development Centre. Before becoming an academic, he worked as a secondary school teacher, group worker in a therapeutic community and probation officer. He was seconded to the Welsh Government, from 2018-21, as specialist policy adviser to the Minister responsible for social care. He is the author of Gender and Child Protection and Working with Men and Health and Social Care (with Brid Featherstone and Mark Rivett).
Steve Myers is Director of Social Sciences at the University of Salford. He is a qualified and registered Social Worker with a background in child protection and youth justice. He has worked in both statutory and voluntary organisations and has been involved with the education and training of Social Workers in Higher Education for the past 25 years.
Register your interest for our upcoming event on the "Challenges and opportunities in the engagement and assessment of fathers in child safeguarding" by emailing hello@aocpp.org.uk
...
We started this podcast at the beginning of lockdown to support professionals continuing to work with vulnerable children, and families, under unprecedented circumstances.
With the goal of alleviating the pressure child protection professionals are under, we’ve brought together leading experts within research and practice to impart their knowledge of the latest issues in child protection and safeguarding.
Eighteen months and thousands of downloads later, we want to hear from YOU about what you would like to hear in upcoming episodes.
Whether it’s a particular topic you want discussed, or a particular person you want invited on the show. We want to ensure that the podcast reflects what you need.
So feel free to email us at hello@aocpp.org.uk with any suggestions.
And if you’ve been enjoying listening to this podcast - please rate, review and subscribe as it helps other child protection professionals find us.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Find our guests at @j_scourfield and @SoboAlllen on Twitter
...
Music by Alexander King
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In today's episode Wendy Thorogood, Chair of the Association of Child Protection Professionals talks to Ian McNicholl about what we as professionals need to know about domestic abuse against men.
In just 14 months, Ian McNicholl migrated from been a picture of health, a home owner, a successful businessman and been financially comfortable to become permanently scarred, registered disabled, homeless, a Benefit Claimant and on the verge of Bankruptcy. Following criminal proceedings, his Female Perpetrator received a custodial sentence of 7 Years for Grievous Bodily Harm with Intent. Ian has shared his traumatic events via both local and national Media Outlets and presented at numerous Conferences in order to raise awareness and enhance existing levels of understanding within the Domestic Abuse profession therefore encouraging more Victims to come forward.
Ian is an Ambassador for “Men Reaching Out” and a member of both the “Employers Initiative on Domestic Abuse (EIDA”) and the “Men & Boys Coalition”.
Wendy Thorogood is a retired Designated Nurse Consultant for children with NHS Dorset Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) based in Dorchester. She trained at St Guy's hospital in London, specialising in child and adult nursing intensive care and cardiac and renal transplants.
Wendy delivered the national leadership programme for safeguarding for the Department of Health and worked directly with the NHS Confederation in relation to current changes ;providing assurance that current and future providers of services are compliant in relation to safeguarding national and local standards;working with Lead Commissioners and the performance team to develop agreed key performance indicators and safety metrics for providers;identifying and taking appropriate action on key risks and issues across commissioned services that may affect safeguarding of children, young people.
Wendy has also spent time working in South Africa in a maternity unit, within a Special Care Baby Unit (SCBU) in Kent, and has worked with drug users to improve maternal care - a project that still runs today.
...
We started this podcast at the beginning of lockdown to support professionals continuing to work with vulnerable children, and families, under unprecedented circumstances.
With the goal of alleviating the pressure child protection professionals are under, we’ve brought together leading experts within research and practice to impart their knowledge of the latest issues in child protection and safeguarding.
Eighteen months and thousands of downloads later, we want to hear from YOU about what you would like to hear in upcoming episodes.
Whether it’s a particular topic you want discussed, or a particular person you want invited on the show. We want to ensure that the podcast reflects what you need.
So feel free to email us at hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk with any suggestions.
And if you’ve been enjoying listening to this podcast - please rate, review and subscribe as it helps other child protection professionals find us.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Find out more about Wendy at: https://www.childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk/wendy-thorogood
Book onto Ian's Masterclass at: https://bit.ly/3jiO8sB
...
Music by Alexander King
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to Association of Child Protection Professionals' Podcast, a podcast where we, alongside guest hosts, share with you the latest in child and family safeguarding.
In today's episode Wendy Thorogood, Chair of the Association of Child Protection Professionals talks to Kirsty Kitchen from Birth Companions about their work supporting women in pregnancy and early motherhood and what child protection professionals can learn from their experience.
Kirsty Kitchen is Head of Policy and Communications at Birth Companions – a charity specialising in the needs and experiences of women facing disadvantage and inequality in pregnancy and early motherhood. Birth Companions’ frontline services and influencing work seeks to improve the care and outcomes of women affected by the criminal justice, social services and immigration systems during the 1001 critical days from conception to a child’s second birthday.
Wendy Thorogood is a retired Designated Nurse Consultant for children with NHS Dorset Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) based in Dorchester. She trained at St Guy's hospital in London, specialising in child and adult nursing intensive care and cardiac and renal transplants.
Wendy delivered the national leadership programme for safeguarding for the Department of Health and worked directly with the NHS Confederation in relation to current changes ;providing assurance that current and future providers of services are compliant in relation to safeguarding national and local standards;working with Lead Commissioners and the performance team to develop agreed key performance indicators and safety metrics for providers;identifying and taking appropriate action on key risks and issues across commissioned services that may affect safeguarding of children, young people.
Wendy has also spent time working in South Africa in a maternity unit, within a Special Care Baby Unit (SCBU) in Kent, and has worked with drug users to improve maternal care - a project that still runs today.
...
We started this podcast at the beginning of lockdown to support professionals continuing to work with vulnerable children, and families, under unprecedented circumstances.
With the goal of alleviating the pressure child protection professionals are under, we’ve brought together leading experts within research and practice to impart their knowledge of the latest issues in child protection and safeguarding.
All in an effort to ensure that whether you’re out on the frontline, delivering your services at home, or even on furlough, you are able to stay informed.
Eighteen months and thousands of downloads later, we want to hear from YOU about what you would like to hear in upcoming episodes.
Whether it’s a particular topic you want discussed, or a particular person you want invited on the show. We want to ensure that the podcast reflects what you need.
So feel free to email us at hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk with any suggestions.
And if you’ve been enjoying listening to this podcast - please rate, review and subscribe as it helps other child protection professionals find us.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Find out more about Wendy at: https://www.childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk/wendy-thorogood
Find out more about Birth Companions at: https://www.birthcompanions.org.uk/
...
Music by Alexander King
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to Association of Child Protection Professionals' Podcast, a podcast where we, alongside guest hosts, share with you the latest in child and family safeguarding.
In today's episode Wendy Thorogood, Chair of the Association of Child Protection Professionals talks to Dr Aravinda Kosaraju about child sexual exploitation and how professionals can support families to prevent it.
Dr Aravinda Kosaraju is a qualified lawyer and social worker specialising in Criminology. With many years of experience working with national and international non-governmental organisations including Parents against Child Sexual Exploitation, Lawyer’s Collective and the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative.
Aravinda has researched extensively into child sexual exploitation, sex trafficking and was involved in various policy reform initiatives in India and the UK. She has also developed multi-agency practitioner training on safeguarding children from sexual exploitation.
Her research draws from critical perspectives in law and criminology broadly engaging with issues of violence against women and children; criminal justice responses to sexual offending; and safeguarding children policy and practice. Her PhD thesis examined the process of attrition in cases involving crimes of child sexual exploitation in England and Wales.
More recently, Aravinda is a Lecturer in Advanced Child Protection at the University of Kent’s Centre for Child Protection. Her current research focuses on supporting sexually exploited children through criminal justice; effective investigation and prosecution of sexual offences against children; and working with children on the move.
Wendy Thorogood is a retired Designated Nurse Consultant for children with NHS Dorset Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) based in Dorchester. She trained at St Guy's hospital in London, specialising in child and adult nursing intensive care and cardiac and renal transplants.
Wendy delivered the national leadership programme for safeguarding for the Department of Health and worked directly with the NHS Confederation in relation to current changes ;providing assurance that current and future providers of services are compliant in relation to safeguarding national and local standards;working with Lead Commissioners and the performance team to develop agreed key performance indicators and safety metrics for providers;identifying and taking appropriate action on key risks and issues across commissioned services that may affect safeguarding of children, young people.
Wendy has also spent time working in South Africa in a maternity unit, within a Special Care Baby Unit (SCBU) in Kent, and has worked with drug users to improve maternal care - a project that still runs today.
...
We started this podcast at the beginning of lockdown to support professionals continuing to work with vulnerable children, and families, under unprecedented circumstances.
With the goal of alleviating the pressure child protection professionals are under, we’ve brought together leading experts within research and practice to impart their knowledge of the latest issues in child protection and safeguarding.
All in an effort to ensure that whether you’re out on the frontline, delivering your services at home, or even on furlough, you are able to stay informed.
Six months and thousands of downloads later, we want to hear from YOU about what you would like to hear in upcoming episodes.
Whether it’s a particular topic you want discussed, or a particular person you want invited on the show. We want to ensure that the podcast reflects what you need.
So feel free to email us at hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk with any suggestions.
And if you’ve been enjoying listening to this podcast - please rate, review and subscribe as it helps other child protection professionals find us.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Find out more about Wendy at: https://www.childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk/wendy-thorogood
Find out more about Aravinda at: https://www.kent.ac.uk/law/people/1437/www.kent.ac.uk/law/people/1437/kosaraju-aravinda
Find out more about the Centre for Child Protection, University of Kent at: https://www.kent.ac.uk/sspssr/ccp/
Book onto our upcoming event on Child Exploitation with the University of Kent here: https://www.childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk/Event/exploitation-2021
...
Music by Alexander King
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to Association of Child Protection Professionals' Podcast, a podcast where we, alongside guest hosts, share with you the latest in child and family safeguarding.
In today's episode Wendy Thorogood, Chair of the Association of Child Protection Professionals talks to Professor Brid Featherstone about the child protection implications of poverty, and what the sector and government need to acknowledge amongst an uncertain future.
Brid Featherstone is Professor of Social Work at the University of Huddersfield. She was a member of the Child Welfare Inequalities Project, a research project investigating the relationship between poverty and children’s chances of becoming involved with child protection systems and being looked after. And she is currently working with a number of local authorities on developing poverty aware practices in Children’s Services and local authorities more generally.
Brid has an international reputation in the areas of gender, fathers and child protection, and has advised on reforming child protection nationally and internationally. Most recently she has co-authored the highly influential book 'Re-imagining Child Protection: towards humane social work with families', alongside Sue White and Kate Morris.
Wendy Thorogood is a retired Designated Nurse Consultant for children with NHS Dorset Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) based in Dorchester. She trained at St Guy's hospital in London, specialising in child and adult nursing intensive care and cardiac and renal transplants.
Wendy delivered the national leadership programme for safeguarding for the Department of Health and worked directly with the NHS Confederation in relation to current changes ;providing assurance that current and future providers of services are compliant in relation to safeguarding national and local standards;working with Lead Commissioners and the performance team to develop agreed key performance indicators and safety metrics for providers;identifying and taking appropriate action on key risks and issues across commissioned services that may affect safeguarding of children, young people.
Wendy has also spent time working in South Africa in a maternity unit, within a Special Care Baby Unit (SCBU) in Kent, and has worked with drug users to improve maternal care - a project that still runs today.
...
We started this podcast at the beginning of lockdown to support professionals continuing to work with vulnerable children, and families, under unprecedented circumstances.
With the goal of alleviating the pressure child protection professionals are under, we’ve brought together leading experts within research and practice to impart their knowledge of the latest issues in child protection and safeguarding.
All in an effort to ensure that whether you’re out on the frontline, delivering your services at home, or even on furlough, you are able to stay informed.
Six months and thousands of downloads later, we want to hear from YOU about what you would like to hear in upcoming episodes.
Whether it’s a particular topic you want discussed, or a particular person you want invited on the show. We want to ensure that the podcast reflects what you need.
So feel free to email us at hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk with any suggestions.
And if you’ve been enjoying listening to this podcast - please rate, review and subscribe as it helps other child protection professionals find us.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Find out more about Wendy at: https://www.childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk/wendy-thorogood
Find out more about Professor Brid Featherstone at: https://pure.hud.ac.uk/en/persons/brid-featherstone
...
Music by Alexander King
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to our new podcast series, Meet the Trustees, where we'll be exploring the careers and experiences of our Trustees. We'll be hearing about their early days in frontline roles, and following their career path until the positions that they are holding today.
In today's episode Tammy Banks, the Association's Interim Consultant Director, speaks to Wendy Thorogood, our Chair, about:
Wendy Thorogood is a retired Designated Nurse Consultant for children with NHS Dorset Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) based in Dorchester. She trained at St Guy's hospital in London, specialising in child and adult nursing intensive care and cardiac and renal transplants.
Wendy delivered the national leadership programme for safeguarding for the Department of Health and worked directly with the NHS Confederation in relation to current changes ;providing assurance that current and future providers of services are compliant in relation to safeguarding national and local standards;working with Lead Commissioners and the performance team to develop agreed key performance indicators and safety metrics for providers;identifying and taking appropriate action on key risks and issues across commissioned services that may affect safeguarding of children, young people.
Wendy has also spent time working in South Africa in a maternity unit, within a Special Care Baby Unit (SCBU) in Kent, and has worked with drug users to improve maternal care - a project that still runs today.
Tammy Banks is Director of Taye training and Founder of the Training 4 Influence methodology. Alongside being AoCPP Interim Director she also leads Taye training and sits on the Parliamentary Committee for Standards.
Would you like to learn more from this discussion? If you are a member, you can access extra resources created by our podcast guests and kindly made accessible to AoCPP members via our members website.
...
For those listening in the future, this episode is being recorded and published while the UK (and the world) is deep in the throes of the COVID19 pandemic. Many frontline professionals are finding themselves overworked, time poor and confused as government guidance is changing daily. To alleviate the pressure child protection professionals are under, we have created the AoCPP Podcast, which will provide support to these professionals who continue to serve our country, its vulnerable children, and families, in unprecedented circumstances.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@aocpp.org.uk
Find out more about Tammy at www.tayetraining.org.uk
Music by Alexander King.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to Association of Child Protection Professionals' Podcast, a podcast where we, alongside guest hosts, share with you the latest in child and family safeguarding.
In today's episode Steve Myers, Trustee of the Association of Child Protection Professionals talks to Detective Sergeant Matthew Garland-Collins about safeguarding children in and on the edge of care.
They discuss:
The vulnerabilities at play for these children, what Matthew and his team are doing to tackle this problem (in particular the No Wrong Door programme he and his team has adopted, and what all child protection professionals ought to know about how to protect children in and on the edge of care.
Matthew Garland-Collins joined North Yorkshire Police in 2003 initially working on the uniform response team until 2006 where he began work with the Criminal Investigation Department and was promoted to Detective Sergeant in 2012.
In May 2013 he took the role as Intelligence DS and in 2015 began oversight of the police involvement with the No Wrong Door Programme.
Since September last year he has been the Harm Reduction, Missing from Home and No wrong Door Intelligence Sergeant for North Yorkshire Police, where he spends much of his time working with care homes to reduce the number of children going missing across Yorkshire.
Children in care are statistically more likely to be reported as missing, subsequently becoming influenced or groomed by the wrong people. Which is why Matthew and his team are working to address why this behavior is occurring so that they can reduce the number of young people going missing.
Steve Myers is Director of Social Sciences at the University of Salford. He is a qualified and registered Social Worker with a background in child protection and youth justice. He has worked in both statutory and voluntary organisations and has been involved with the education and training of Social Workers in Higher Education for the past 25 years.
Steve has researched and written about strengths-based and solution focused practice, and has an interest in working with violent behaviour including sexual violence. He is keen to promote interprofessional CPD for child protection professionals and has developed and delivered several programmes to support this.
...
We started this podcast at the beginning of lockdown to support professionals continuing to work with vulnerable children, and families, under unprecedented circumstances.
With the goal of alleviating the pressure child protection professionals are under, we’ve brought together leading experts within research and practice to impart their knowledge of the latest issues in child protection and safeguarding.
All in an effort to ensure that whether you’re out on the frontline, delivering your services at home, or even on furlough, you are able to stay informed.
Six months and thousands of downloads later, we want to hear from YOU about what you would like to hear in upcoming episodes.
Whether it’s a particular topic you want discussed, or a particular person you want invited on the show. We want to ensure that the podcast reflects what you need.
So feel free to email us at hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk with any suggestions.
And if you’ve been enjoying listening to this podcast - please rate, review and subscribe as it helps other child protection professionals find us.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Find out more about Steve at: https://www.salford.ac.uk/health-and-society/our-staff/health-and-society-academics/cxs115
Find out more about the No Wrong Door initiative adopted by the North Yorkshire Police here: https://www.northyorks.gov.uk/no-wrong-door
...
Music by Alexander King
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In today's bonus episode, we're looking back at some of the previous episodes of the AoCPP Podcast.
Namely:
We started this podcast at the beginning of lockdown to support professionals continuing to work with vulnerable children, and families, under unprecedented circumstances.
With the goal of alleviating the pressure child protection professionals are under, we’ve brought together leading experts within research and practice to impart their knowledge of the latest issues in child protection and safeguarding.
All in an effort to ensure that whether you’re out on the frontline, delivering your services at home, or even on furlough, you are able to stay informed.
Six months and thousands of downloads later, we want to hear from YOU about what you would like to hear in upcoming episodes.
Whether it’s a particular topic you want discussed, or a particular person you want invited on the show. We want to ensure that the podcast reflects what you need.
So feel free to email us at hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk with any suggestions.
And if you’ve been enjoying listening to this podcast - please rate, review and subscribe as it helps other child protection professionals find us.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to Association of Child Protection Professionals' Podcast, a podcast where we, alongside guest hosts, share with you the latest in child and family safeguarding. This episode is a Special Episode. In these special episodes, we take a more focused look at a singular issue that professionals working with children and families need to know about. These are often specific and urgent – so we’ll be talking with a professional at the forefront of the issue.
In today's episode, Ann Marie Christian, Trustee at the Association of Child Protection Professionals, talks to Sarah Dangar about domestic abuse related suicide and the work AAFDA, Advocacy After Fatal Domestic Abuse, does in the statuatory review processes that follow.
Sarah Dangar is the Operations Manager and Deputy CEO at AAFDA, a centre of excellence for reviews after domestic abuse related deaths. She regularly sits on the Home Office Domestic Homicide Review Quality Assurance Panel and in this role has quality assured over 200 Domestic Homicide Reviews.
Sarah has extensive experience supporting victims of domestic and sexual violence. She previously managed victim services for British Forces personnel in Germany and Cyprus and established a witness service for the Military Court in Germany.
In September 2019, Sarah delivered a workshop on Domestic Violence at the European Conference in Oslo, focusing on reviews of non-homicide Domestic Abuse related deaths. And was recently awarded a 2020 Churchill Fellowship. Which will see her travel to the USA and Australia to examine the models of domestic abuse death reviews in order to share this learning in the UK.
Sarah is currently on the Clore Social Leadership program: Emerging Leaders Women and Girls Sector 2020, and a Trustee for Trevi House.
And on October 15th, Sarah will be speaking at our Domestic Abuse Virtual Conference, where we have brought together leading experts within this field to share their learnings.
Ann Marie is a registered children & families’ social worker practicing over two decades with twelve years of social work management. She worked in a pilot project as a school based social worker in the late nineties for four years and experienced safeguarding of children pre:threshold intervention. Ann Marie evolved and managed cluster social workers in schools and provided safeguarding advice as a safeguarding advisor to schools and Headteachers. This role included a LADO role for education settings. Ann Marie is now an International Safeguarding Consultant & Trainer and is carries out associate work for various organisations including NSPCC, Council of International Schools, Premier League and much more.
Would you like to learn more from this discussion? If you are a member, you can access extra resources created by our podcast guests and kindly made accessible to AoCPP members via our members website.
...
For those listening in the future, this episode is being recorded and published while the UK (and the world) is experiencing the COVID19 pandemic. Many frontline professionals are finding themselves overworked, time poor and confused as government guidance is changing daily. To alleviate the pressure child protection professionals are under, we have created the AoCPP Podcast, which will provide support to these professionals who continue to serve our country, its vulnerable children, and families, in unprecedented circumstances.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@aocpp.org.uk
Find out more about AAFDA: https://aafda.org.uk/
Find out more about Ann Marie: http://annmariechristian.com/
Music by Alexander King
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to Association of Child Protection Professionals' Podcast, a podcast where we, alongside guest hosts, share with you the latest in child and family safeguarding. This episode is a Special Episode. In these special episodes, we take a more focused look at a singular issue that professionals working with children and families need to know about. These are often specific and urgent – so we’ll be talking with a professional at the forefront of the issue.
In today's episode, Wendy Thorogood, Chair of the Association of Child Protection Professionals, talks to Dr Sarah Steele about Fabricated and Induced Illness and the professional dilemmas that come along with it.
It is widely recognized and acknowledged across the health, police and social care economies that Fabricated and Induced Illness by Carers (FII) is one of the most challenging areas of Child Protection in which to work. Practitioners have to make extremely exacting professional judgements and can experience various levels of stress when addressing the multiplicity of complex issues inherent in such cases.
There is no universally agreed definition of FII, and there is no unique profile in the context of those who perpetrate this form of child abuse. Hobbs et al refer to FII as ‘a deceptive, secretive and interactional liaison which has at its centre the child, the doctor or other professional and the perpetrator…..’. It is imperative therefore that all professionals recognize this risk from the very start of the case as a first step towards, not only better protecting the child victims, but, also in beginning to protect the professionals themselves from being negatively impacted by the inherent divisiveness of such cases as well as from potentially being entrapped in the abusive cycle.
Having a heightened professional awareness of the intrinsic risks in FII cases can be a first step in helping to prevent or contemporaneously address any conflicts and issues as they arise on the front line.
Dr Sarah Steele is an Independent Child Safeguarding Consultant and formerly Head of Safeguarding and Consultant Nurse at a large university hospital NHS foundation Trust and active member of two LSCBs. She has over fifteen years experience as a practitioner, manager, teacher and strategic leader specialising in child protection in both community and acute settings.
Sarah is currently director of Patronus Child Protection Consultancy which provides specialist advisory services including expert advice, guidance and support on a range of aspects of child protection and safeguarding to national and regional organisations including health, police and social care professionals, charities and LSCBs/Safeguarding Partnerships amongst others both in the UK and beyond.
She has undertaken numerous Serious Case Reviews, Appreciative Inquiries, Internal Management Reviews, Child Death and other Reviews. She has led on Culture and Practice Change Initiatives in relation to closer working with adult safeguarding teams and for many years has promoted the concept of triangulation of information and working practices in the context of the children of vulnerable adult patients who are parents/carers to inform and support contextual safeguarding.
Sarah has a particular interest in and significant experience of managing the full range of Fabricated and Induced Illness (FII) spectrum cases in multi-agency and acute hospital settings. She contributed to the DCSF 2008 national guidance document ‘Safeguarding Children in whom illness is fabricated or induced’, as well as co-developing a local standard operating procedure (SOP) with a senior police colleague in 2015 to facilitate and support enhanced collaborative multi-agency working across such complex cases.
She has developed and supported the implementation of comprehensive and wide-ranging programmes of child protection training for all levels of multi-agency staff including FII training and presentations.
Most recently she has reviewed and commented on the draft new RCPCH FII guidance document which is due for publication in the near future and has contributed to the iHV 2020 FII good practice points (GPP) programme.
Wendy Thorogood is a retired Designated Nurse Consultant for children. She trained at St Guy's hospital in London, specialising in child and adult nursing, intensive care and cardiac and renal transplants.
Wendy delivered the national leadership programme for safeguarding for the Department of Health and worked directly with the NHS Confederation in relation to current changes; providing assurance that current and future providers of services are compliant in relation to safeguarding national and local standards;working with Lead Commissioners and the performance team to develop agreed key performance indicators and safety metrics for providers; identifying and taking appropriate action on key risks and issues across commissioned services that may affect safeguarding of children, young people.
She is currently the chair of the Association of Child Protection Professionals.
...
For those listening in the future, this episode is being recorded and published while the UK (and the world) is experiencing the COVID19 pandemic. Many frontline professionals are finding themselves overworked, time poor and confused as government guidance is changing daily. To alleviate the pressure child protection professionals are under, we have created the AoCPP Podcast, which will provide support to these professionals who continue to serve our country, its vulnerable children, and families, in unprecedented circumstances.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@aocpp.org.uk
Find out more about Dr Sarah Steele at: http://patronuschildprotection.co.uk/
Find out more about Wendy Thorogood at: https://www.childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk/wendy-thorogood
Music by Alexander King
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The following episode discusses suicide including, descriptions of a suicide, suicide attempts and self-harm. This content may be disturbing, so we encourage listeners to prepare themselves emotionally before proceeding, and potentially postpone listening until you feel ready. If you believe that the episode will be traumatising, we urge you to forego it. And if you need information on suicide prevention helplines, please visit the show notes for this episode.
Welcome to Association of Child Protection Professionals' Podcast, a podcast where we, alongside guest hosts, share with you what you need to know in child protection and safeguarding.
This episode is a Special Episode. In these special episodes, we take a more focused look at a singular issue that professionals working with children and families need to know about. These are often specific and urgent – so we’ll be talking with a professional at the forefront of the issue.
In today's episode Wendy Thorogood, Chair of the AoCPP, talks to Michayla about her daughter's experience of mental health conditions and subsequent attempts at taking her own life. She discusses, her family's fight to keep their daughter alive, the effects of COVID on mental health services, and what services and professionals need to do in order to better protect children and young people in her daughter's position.
We greatly appreciate Michayla for sharing her and her daughter's story.
This is a short extract from Wendy's conversation with Michayla. AoCPP members can access the full story via the member's area of our website.
For more information on suicide prevention charities and hotlines, visit the links below:
Papyrus UK: https://www.papyrus-uk.org/
Samaritans: https://www.samaritans.org/
Silence of Suicide (Adults): https://sossilenceofsuicide.org/
...
For those listening in the future, this episode is being recorded and published during the COVID19 pandemic. Many frontline professionals are finding themselves overworked, time poor and confused as government guidance is changing daily. To alleviate the pressure child protection professionals are under, we have created the AoCPP Podcast, which will provide support to these professionals who continue to serve our country, its vulnerable children, and families, in unprecedented circumstances.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@aocpp.org.uk
Music by Alexander King.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to Association of Child Protection Professionals' Podcast, a podcast where we, alongside guest hosts, share with you the latest in child and family safeguarding.
This episode is a Special Episode. In these special episodes, we take a more focused look at a singular issue that professionals working with children and families need to know about. These are often specific and urgent – so we’ll be talking with a professional at the forefront of the issue.
In today's episode, Wendy Thorogood, Chair of the Association of Child Protection Professionals, talks to Yasemin Wigglesworth, CEO of AEGIS about their work in providing accreditation for guardianship organisations providing services to international students aged 18 and under and studying in the UK.
AEGIS was founded in 1994 by a group of established guardianship organisations and UK boarding schools in response to the lack of regulations around care of international students, aged 18 and under, studying in the UK.
Currently, no existing legislation requires registration or accreditation of guardians looking after international students during school holidays in the UK or if short term care is needed out of school.
This is why AEGIS works, firstly, to ensure that guardianship organisations meet the standards of current safeguarding and child protection legislation; and secondly, to ensure that the highest standards are maintained by guardianship organisations in respect of the pastoral, social, cultural and educational welfare of international students.
The core work of AEGIS is the accreditation of guardianship organisations through a rigorous programme of inspections. AEGIS also shares best practice in guardianship with schools and agents. Offering support, guidance and preparation to guardianship organisations seeking accreditation. While also offering support, guidance and up-to-date information to schools, guardians, parents, agents and the education sector.
Wendy Thorogood is a retired Designated Nurse Consultant for children. She trained at St Guy's hospital in London, specialising in child and adult nursing, intensive care and cardiac and renal transplants.
Wendy delivered the national leadership programme for safeguarding for the Department of Health and worked directly with the NHS Confederation in relation to current changes; providing assurance that current and future providers of services are compliant in relation to safeguarding national and local standards;working with Lead Commissioners and the performance team to develop agreed key performance indicators and safety metrics for providers; identifying and taking appropriate action on key risks and issues across commissioned services that may affect safeguarding of children, young people.
She is currently the chair of the Association of Child Protection Professionals.
Would you like to learn more from this discussion? You can access extra resources kindly made accessible to AoCPP members by AEGIS via our website.
...
Did you know you can access AoCPP resources for free?
The AoCPP is offering a free membership trial between until the 31st of August this year.
We realise that the next few months will continue to put pressure on child protection professionals, particularly those working on the frontline, and that is why we’re opening our resources to as many of you as possible.
To sign up for your free membership and for more information go to childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk/join
...
For those listening in the future, this episode is being recorded and published while the UK (and the world) is experiencing the COVID19 pandemic. Many frontline professionals are finding themselves overworked, time poor and confused as government guidance is changing daily. To alleviate the pressure child protection professionals are under, we have created the AoCPP Podcast, which will provide support to these professionals who continue to serve our country, its vulnerable children, and families, in unprecedented circumstances.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@aocpp.org.uk
Find out more about AEGIS at: https://aegisuk.net/
Find out more about Wendy Thorogood at: https://www.childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk/wendy-thorogood
Music by Alexander King
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to Association of Child Protection Professionals' Podcast, a podcast where we, alongside guest hosts, share with you what you need to know in child protection and safeguarding.
This episode is a Special Episode. In these special episodes, we take a more focused look at a singular issue that professionals working with children and families need to know about. These are often specific and urgent – so we’ll be talking with a professional at the forefront of the issue.
In today's episode, Mark Pearson, trustee at the AoCPP, talks to Kelechi Ukandu about child exploitation and what practitioners and organisations can do to prevent it, with a focus on the partnership working and good practice going on in London.
Kelechi Ukandu currently works as a Children Safeguarding Advisor in London and has worked for many years in the NHS both within the acute and community settings. She has had many years of experience as a specialist community public health nurse supporting families with complex safeguarding issues and adverse childhood experiences.
Kelechi is a passionate leader who is currently on the highly acclaimed Florence nightingale leadership programme. She is an innovator who has led on different projects for NHS England and Health Education England, and a passionate trainer and speaker who has delivered training to hundreds of professionals, facilitated parenting programmes, supervised clinicians in practice. She is a Nurse mentor, Specialist practice teacher and Nurse prescriber. She has won local authority partnership awards and continues to be recognised for her impactful change in her organisation in relation to safeguarding children.
Most recently, she is completing work in partnership with the local authority on the child exploitation and serious youth violence strategy. With expertise in the topic of: Intra-familiar abuse, adultification, cultural competency, contextual safeguarding, intersectionality, the identification of neglect, trauma-informed approach and think family assessment approach.
Mark Pearson is a trustee at the Association of Child Protection Professionals and CEO of Excelsior Safeguarding.
...
Did you know you can access AoCPP resources for free over the next few weeks?
The AoCPP is offering a free membership trial until the 31st of August this year.
To sign up for your free membership and for more information go to childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk/join
...
For those listening in the future, this episode is being recorded and published during the COVID19 pandemic. Many frontline professionals are finding themselves overworked, time poor and confused as government guidance is changing daily. To alleviate the pressure child protection professionals are under, we have created the AoCPP Podcast, which will provide support to these professionals who continue to serve our country, its vulnerable children, and families, in unprecedented circumstances.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@aocpp.org.uk
Find out more about Kelechi Ukandu:
Twitter: @KelechiUkandu5
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kelechiu
Find out more about Mark Pearson at:http://excelsiorsafeguarding.co.uk/index.html
Music by Alexander King.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to Association of Child Protection Professionals' Podcast, a weekly podcast where we, alongside guest hosts, share with you the latest in child and family safeguarding.
This episode is a Special Episode. In these special episodes, we take a more focused look at a singular issue that professionals working with children and families need to know about. These are often specific and urgent – so we’ll be talking with a professional at the forefront of the issue.
In today's episode, Peter Sidebotham, Trustee at the Association of Child Protection Professionals, talks to Dr Vincent Palusci and Dr Gabriel Otterman about their work in putting together our special issue of Child Abuse Review focusing on the recognition, response and prevention of abusive head trauma, and our upcoming conference on this same issue.
Vincent J. Palusci, M.D., M.S. is Professor of Pediatrics at New York University Grossman School of Medicine in New York City where he chairs the Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital Child Protection Committee. He is a board certified general and child abuse pediatrician at Bellevue Hospital and Langone Health.
Dr Palusci received his medical degree from the Rutgers University New Jersey Medical School and completed his internship and residency in pediatrics at New York University / Bellevue Hospital Center. He entered private practice and later joined the faculty of the College of Human Medicine at Michigan State University where he was a TRECOS scholar and earned a masters degree in epidemiology.
As Professor of Pediatrics at Wayne State University, Dr Palusci opened the child protection center and was the first program director for their child abuse pediatrics fellowship. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Pediatrics and serves as associate editor of Child Abuse Review. His research has focused on epidemiologic and health services issues for child abuse victims and prevention.
Dr Palusci has edited or co-edited seven books, including “The Shaken Baby Syndrome: A Multidisciplinary Approach” and received the Ray E. Helfer Award for child abuse prevention from the American Academy of Pediatrics and the National Alliance for Children’s Trust and Prevention Funds.
Gabriel Otterman, MD, MPH, PhD, serves as full-time Senior Consultant Paediatrician, Medical Director of the Child Protection Team and faculty member at Uppsala University Children’s Hospital.
Dr. Otterman is founding co-chair, and served as co-chair of the Section on Child Maltreatment of the Swedish Paediatric Society. His research interests currently focus on an innovative medical home model for children and adolescents in out-of-home care. In collaboration with the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Ray E. Helfer Society, he serves as co-course director for the International Course on Child Abuse Paediatrics, InterCAP, in 2015, 2017, 2019 and 2021.
Dr. Otterman has worked as a general paediatrician and child abuse specialist in Massachusetts, Cambodia, and China before moving to Sweden to join the faculty at Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm, Sweden in 2003. He now lectures in the Nordic region of Sweden and internationally about social paediatrics and child abuse medicine. In Uppsala County, he is responsible for teaching medical and nursing students, physicians in training and faculty on the early recognition and management of child maltreatment.
Dr. Otterman is founding co-chair, and served as co-chair of the Section on Child Maltreatment of the Swedish Paediatric Society. His research interests currently focus on an innovative medical home model for children and adolescents in out-of-home care. In collaboration with the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Ray E. Helfer Society, he has served as Co-Course Director for the International Course on Child Abuse Paediatrics, InterCAP, in 2015, 2017 and 2019. In 2020, he was elected to the Executive Council at the International Society for the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect, ISPCAN.
Peter Sidebotham is an Emeritus Professor of Child Health at Warwick Medical School, and formerly a consultant paediatrician and designated doctor for safeguarding children and for child death reviews. He has over 20 years’ experience as a practitioner and academic specialising in child protection.
Peter has published extensively on serious and fatal child maltreatment and unexpected child deaths. He is a member of the National Child Safeguarding Practice Review Panel. And is co-editor of Child Abuse Review as well as a Trustee of the Lullaby Trust and the Association of Child Protection Professionals.
Would you like to learn more from this discussion? If you are a member you can access this entire Special Issue of Child Abuse Review via our member's website or through Wiley.
...
Did you know you can access AoCPP resources for free over the next month?
The AoCPP is offering a free membership trial until the 31st of August this year.
We realise that the next few months will continue to put pressure on child protection professionals, particularly those working on the frontline, and that is why we’re opening our resources to as many of you as possible.
To sign up for your free membership and for more information go to childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk/join
...
For those listening in the future, this episode is being recorded and published while the UK (and the world) is experiencing the COVID19 pandemic. Many frontline professionals are finding themselves overworked, time poor and confused as government guidance is changing daily. To alleviate the pressure child protection professionals are under, we have created the AoCPP Podcast, which will provide support to these professionals who continue to serve our country, its vulnerable children, and families, under unprecedented circumstances.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: @AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@aocpp.org.uk
Find out more about Dr Vincent Palusci at: https://nyulangone.org/doctors/1285661868/vincent-j-palusci
Find out more about Dr Gabriel Otterman at:
Find out more about Dr Peter Sidebotham at: https://www.childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk/peter-sidebotham
Music by Alexander King
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to Association of Child Protection Professionals' Podcast, a weekly podcast where we, alongside guest hosts, share with you what you need to know in child protection and safeguarding.
This episode is a Special Episode. In these special episodes, we take a more focused look at a singular issue that professionals working with children and families need to know about. These are often specific and urgent – so we’ll be talking with a professional at the forefront of the issue.
In today's episode, Tammy Banks, our Interim Consultant Director, talks to Warren Larkin, of Warren Larkin Associates, about Trauma, adversity and resilience in the context of a public health crisis. They discuss Warren's Resilience Taskforce and how the AoCPP and its members can help it.
Prior to founding Warren Larkin Associates, Warren spent 24 years in the NHS working predominantly with individuals and families experiencing serious mental health difficulties. First as an assistant working on long-stay psychiatric wards, and then as Clinical Psychologist.
Warren spent 5 years as Clinical Network Director, responsible for Children and Families Services across Lancashire, where he was responsible for the quality and safety of care and for research and innovation. It is this experience that led to his passion for public health and prevention work.
More recently, Warren is a Consultant Clinical Psychologist and a Visiting Professor at Sunderland University where he works with the Faculty of Health Sciences and Wellbeing to develop their research programme and training curricula.
He has a long-standing interest in the relationships between childhood adversity and outcomes later in life and has published numerous research on the topic of adverse childhood experiences, trauma and psychosis including articles and a published book in 2006 exploring this theme.
Warren has also been involved in policy development and has acted as an advisor to a number of UK and foreign government agencies. He was a member of the Children and Young People’s Mental Health Services National Task Force, the NICE expert reference group on first episode psychosis, the ‘Tackling CSE’ advisory group and was a contributing author of the recently published Personality Disorder Consensus Statement.
More recently, Warren developed the Routine Enquiry about Adversity in Childhood (REACh) approach as a way of assisting organisations to become more trauma-informed and to train professionals to ask routinely about adversity in their everyday practice. And is now leading the Resilience Taskforce which is calling on the government to take seriously the mental health implications of the COVID19 pandemic and the subsequent long term effects of those who have experienced trauma during this period.
Tammy Banks is Director of Taye training and Founder of the Training 4 Influence methodology. Alongside being AoCPP Interim Director she also leads Taye training and sits on the Parliamentary Committee for Standards.
Would you like to learn more from this discussion? If you are a member, you can access extra resources created by our podcast guests and kindly made accessible to AoCPP members via our members website.
...
Did you know you can access AoCPP resources for free over the next few months?
The AoCPP is offering a free membership trial between until the 31st of August this year.
We realise that the next few months will continue to put pressure on child protection professionals, particularly those working on the frontline, and that is why we’re opening our resources to as many of you as possible.
To sign up for your free membership and for more information go to childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk/join
...
For those listening in the future, this episode is being recorded and published while the UK (and the world) is deep in the throes of the COVID19 pandemic. Many frontline professionals are finding themselves overworked, time poor and confused as government guidance is changing daily. To alleviate the pressure child protection professionals are under, we have created the AoCPP Podcast, which will provide support to these professionals who continue to serve our country, its vulnerable children, and families, in unprecedented circumstances.
...
Find us at:
childprotectionprofessionals.org.uk
Twitter: AoCPPTweet
Facebook: The Association of Child Protection Professionals
Email: hello@aocpp.org.uk
Find out more about Warren Larkin at: https://warrenlarkinassociates.co.uk
Find out more about the Resilience Taskforce at: https://www.resiliencetaskforce.co.uk
Find out more about Tammy at www.tayetraining.org.uk
Music by Alexander King.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.