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The effects of aggressive resistant parents on child protection workers' personal,family and professional lives.
1. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents on child protection
workers’ personal, family and
professional lives
Professor Brian Littlechild University of
Hertfordshire
b.littlechild@herts.ac.uk
0044 (01)707 284423
2. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
This presentation examines the nature and effects of violence
and aggression from parents against childcare and protection
workers.
The presentation sets out key issues derived from the findings of
a research and literature review, and subsequent findings from
a survey, on how individual workers experience aggression from
parents, and how they and their agencies can best understand
and respond to aggressive and resistant behaviours from
parents in safeguarding children work.
2
3. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
Areas often neglected in policy, practice and
support for staff:
How parents experience us
Effects on staff
Effects on practice
Effects on children
How best support/supervise staff
3
4. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
Harris and Leather (2012) found in their
research that as exposure to service user
violence increases, so does reporting of stress
symptoms, reduction of job satisfaction, and
fear/feeling vulnerable as a consequence of
exposure to such behaviour.
4
5. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• In Robson, Cossar and Quayle’s study (2014)
they found the majority of participants across
all studies in this area that they examined in
their review of the literature reported having
experienced at least one incident of violence
throughout their career including verbal and
physical aggression, threats, property damage
and intimidation, and many with much higher
rates than this.
5
6. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Violence and aggression from parents towards childcare
and protection workers is known to negatively affect the
safety and well-being of both staff and child clients in child
protection work. The nature of these effects, and the ways
in which we can best deal with them, are set out.
• The individualised experiences and effects on staff- their
emotional and physical effects, effects on their professional
and/or personal life, effects on respondents’ subsequent
work- (Holmes et al, 2012), need to be taken into account
in policies and procedures in providing support for staff and
clients/patients(Harris and Leather, 2012) , as examined in
this presentation.
6
7. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Findings from the systematic reviews of SCRs
in England demonstrate the wide-ranging
extent and effects of parental hostility
contained within the most serious instances of
child abuse. The findings demonstrated the
frequent negative effects of parental
resistance and aggression on the protection of
children (see e.g. Department of Health, 1991;
Brandon et al, 2008; Brandon et al., 2009;
Ofsted, 2008).
7
8. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Brandon et al. in one of their biennial analyses of SCRs
for the Department for Children, Schools and Families
examined 161 inquiries, concluded that in many
situations parents were hostile to workers, who were
then often frightened to carry out home visits. Hostile
parental behaviours have potentially paralysing effects
on practitioners, negatively affecting their ability to
“reflect, make judgments, act clearly, and to follow
through with referrals, assessments or plans” or keep a
focus on the needs and experiences of the child, where
“children went unseen and unheard” (Brandon et al.,
2008:3).
8
9. Avoidance
• Emphasising this point further, an Ofsted
evaluation of 50 SCRs (Ofsted, 2008)
determined that families were often hostile to
contact from professionals, and that they
developed skilful strategies for keeping them
at arm’s length. Drawing on a sub-sample of
47 cases for which more detailed information
was available in their analysis, Brandon et al
identified a continuum of co-operation
between families and agencies
9
10. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• On the co-operation end of the continuum
families showed neutrality or a willingness to
engage with agencies and seek help; at the
other end of the continuum researchers found
hostility, avoidance of contact, disguised or
partial compliance, and ambivalent or
selective co-operation (Brandon et al, 2008).
See also Tuck, 2013.
10
11. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• There is clear evidence that violence and threats
from service users is common in social work,
certain health settings, and social care.
Threatened and actual violence can significantly
affect workers’ stress levels, capacity to carry out
their work effectively, and for some, their
commitment to that work (Norris, 1990; 2005a,
2005b; Royal Holloway College, 2001; Brockmann
and McLean, 2000; Brockmann, 2002; current
authors 2002, 2005; Denney, 2010; Holmes et al,
2012; Harris and Leather, 2012; Laird, 2013;
Robson, Cossar and Quayle, 2014).
11
12. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• An increased emphasis on investigative risk
assessment focused work within what can
often become situations of conflict (Parton,
1998; Littlechild, 2008)- a role that affects
parents/ children, and many professionals can
consciously or unconconsciously avoid.
12
13. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Pahl (1999: 91) notes the importance of the
‘very real power’ in the role, ‘which can
provoke service users and their relatives to
abuse, but which also protects them from
more serious physical attack’.
13
14. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
How balance?
• Rule of optimism revisited- Dingwall et al,
1983, 2014) Stephen Menheniott death- man
created fear in an entire community; Ainlee
Walker, 2002
14
15. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Community Care/Reconsruct survey
(Community Care, 2011) of 590 social work
and social care staff discovered that the small
number of parents who exhibit such
behaviour to a significant degree can pose a
real threat to their children through the
effects this has on the ability of staff to carry
out their assessments and interventions
effectively and adequately.
15
16. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
In the survey,
• 91% of respondents stated that their caseload
includes parents who are hostile or
intimidating
• 51% said that they dealt with such parents
on a weekly or more frequent basis.
16
17. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• 44% of respondents said that they agreed or
strongly agreed that vulnerable children are
being put at greater risk because they do not
get enough supervision and support when
dealing with hostile and intimidating parents
• Only 25% said their organization had existing
procedures/guidelines that they all use in
dealing with such parents.
17
18. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• The survey found frontline workers having to
deal frequently with resistant and aggressive
behaviours from parents, including threats,
abuse, aggravated complaints, and physical
violence.
18
19. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Respondents reported that they had found
they had experienced loss of confidence in
carrying out their work, with their ability to
protect children compromised, as a result
such behaviour. Some staff reported
consequent fear of confronting parents
appropriately
19
20. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Concerns about inadequate supervision and
support were expressed, as well as
significant negative impacts upon their own
personal health and well-being.
20
21. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Experiences of aggression and violence:
• 48% (n=285) had received threats to make a complaint
against them from parents during the previous six
months.
• 42% (n=247) had received threats to their person
during the previous six months.
• 61% (n=357) said that they had been threatened by
parents during the previous six months, with 48%
(n=281) of those receiving multiple threats over that
time.
• 50% (n=295) stated that they dealt with hostile and
intimidating parents at least once a week.
21
22. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• The impact on workers’ personal lives:
• 66% (n=390) believed that dealing with such
parents had had a negative impact on their
work and their own families.
• 16% (n=97) had received threats to their
families.
22
23. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• The effects on workers’ own and wider child protection
work:
• 42% (n=250) of respondents said that they agreed or
strongly agreed that vulnerable children are being put
at greater risk because workers do not get enough
supervision and support when dealing with hostile and
intimidating parents.
• Only 23% (n=138) said their organisation had existing
procedures/guidelines that they all use in dealing with
such parents.
• Only 14% (n=83) had reported any threats to the police
(Community Care, 2011).
23
24. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• One respondent had suffered a miscarriage
that resulted from an assault, and had a
garden fork pierced into their leg. Two had to
move home with their families to avoid the
stalking/aggression of parent(s), and two had
to change their name for the same reason.
24
25. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Fifty seven (10%) reported being held captive
in clients’ homes. Four had to have extra
police home security or protection, with
another providing the extra home security
themselves. Eight (1%) staff had needed to
take time off work as a result of the incident.
Two had experienced racist abuse.
25
26. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• There were 379 reports of emotional impacts
on workers, including 60 (10%) workers
reporting anxiety, 84 (14%) reporting stress,
and four (1%) reporting panic attacks. Twenty
nine (5%) workers reported depression or
associated symptoms including crying and
feeling emotionally drained.
• Fifty-nine (10%) workers reported disturbed
sleep and sleeplessness.
26
27. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• There were 139 reports of impacts on
workers’ personal lives, including impacts on
their partners/families, reporting the need for
extra physical security and/or police
surveillance, moving home, or changing their
name
27
28. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• A key finding was that there was a cumulative
and circular set of effects on some respondents,
their families and their practice, as evidenced in a
number of the quotes in the preceding three
sections. This finding is of particular importance
as 66% (n=390) of respondents believed that
dealing with such parents had a negative impact
on their work and their own families. Sixty-six
(11%) respondents also set out specific effects on
their personal lives and/or on their
partners/families.
28
29. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Effective responses to such parental
aggression was not a feature of responses;
only four respondents had felt well supported
in this way. One worker felt well supported
when managers took out a court injunction
against an aggressive parent. Two were
positive about risk assessment/strategy
meetings being called soon after an incident,
to ensure plans were in place to protect them
and the child.
29
30. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• One manager had arranged a form of
restorative justice meeting that was perceived
as valuable by the worker concerned.
• Five respondents thought that the agency
needed to make clear to parents the limits of
what staff should be prepared to be subjected
to.
30
31. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Seventy-seven per cent of respondents had
been threatened with complaints. Many of
these complaints may be justified and
appropriate, but some at least are meant to
threaten the worker, in attempts to divert
them from protecting the child
31
32. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• It is clear from these findings that both
workers and the children they protect can be
at risk if workers are not supported and
supervised by managers who understand the
stresses arising from working with resistant,
threatening and violent parent service users.
Managers must understand the need for
appropriate responses for staff and
perpetrators.
32
33. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Stanley and Goddard (1997) identified how some
workers can accommodate service user
aggression as part of their defence mechanisms.
The authors discussed how abusive families can
use a complex set of dynamics within tactics to
draw the worker into the role of victim, which
means they are unable to challenge the abuse, or
utilize procedures properly. Stanley and Goddard
(1997) also suggest that at times, workers appear
to indulge in self-deception and denial of
violence.
33
34. Unsupported staff
• The potential dangerousness to children
where workers are severely stressed and
unsupported is noted by Dale et al. (1986),
Reder et al. (1993), and by Littlechild (2013).
Gibbs (2001) argues that supervision is a vital
element in workers’ ability to maintain
themselves whilst dealing with these stresses
and to sustain the focus of their work.
34
35. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Focused support and supervision that
addresses these issues of the effects of
parental aggression/avoidance are then key
to staff being able to challenge parents
appropriately and effectively with
authoritative, but not authoritarian practice.
This must be undertaken in order to enhance
the safety and well- being of staff and the
children they are attempting to protect in such
situations (see e.g. Tuck, 2013).
35
36. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Fauth et al. (2010) in their knowledge review of this
area concluded that practitioners need to deal more
openly with the power dynamics between themselves
and hostile parents. There is a need for workers to use
a more authoritative approach with parents. There is
also a need for managers to recognize that parental
hostility hampers practitioners’ abilities in decision-
making and ability to follow through on assessment
and intervention plans. These points are emphasised
and expanded upon by Tuck (2013).
36
37. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• It would appear that a greater focus on training and
development of managers is needed to ensure they
have an appreciation of, and strategies to deal with,
these well-evidenced problem areas for staff, agency,
and children. More attention to training for front line
staff is also indicated from the findings, as only 49% of
the respondents had received such training. This would
need to focus on how to recognize the nature and
effects of different types of aggression and avoidance.
Training also needs to address why the worker may be
finding it difficult to recognize these problems and deal
with them, and the ways staff may react emotionally
and professionally.
37
38. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Some of the areas arising from the previous
discussions in this article that may inform
agencies and staff in what to address in
policies, procedure and aide memoires to use
in supervisory practice may include:
• Are there clear risk assessment policies
and procedures in place from which to take
into account our knowledge of the dynamics
of such engagement/non-engagement?
38
39. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Is there systematic planning and reviewing of the
assessment and interventions over time, using our
knowledge of the effects on workers and their abilities
to work to effectively to protect the child (ren)
• How are approaches to apparent avoidance
/aggressive behaviours identified, agreed and set out in
agency and interagency policies, and maintained within
agency culture, supervisory practice, and with
fathers/parents?
39
40. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• How clear are these to workers and to the
parents in, for example, introductory meetings
and planning meetings? How effectively are
they spelt out, reviewed and maintained over
time?
• What range of responses to parents should
be available, operated by whom, in what ways
to ensure these approaches are
operationalised and kept in place?
40
41. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• If we are to fully protect children living in such
abusive environments where there is
avoidacne/aggression and violence against
staff that can keep professionals at bay,
agencies and individual workers need to
develop a much better focus on this, and
mechanisms to provide the back up and
messages for staff to do this-
41
42. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• or we will continue too often to find in child
abuse death reports that staff have not been able
to appropriately resilient in the face of such
behaviours or to challenge parents to a sufficient
degree where those parents are using threats and
other tactics to keep the workers at bay, and
leave the child isolated and unprotected in
abusive and dangerous situations. This is in effect
a hierarchy of support- if we do not support
workers to deal effectively with such aggression,
we may be leaving children at risk because this
has not been effectively done.
42
43. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• One key area from findings was how for some
respondents there was a cumulative and
circular set of effects on them, their families
and their practice. “It affects my emotional
well-being which in turn impacts upon my
personal relationships and my ability to
accomplish things I need to do both in and out
of work”.
43
44. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Respondents reported concerns that the
effects of the stress and anxiety from work
that they took home with them increased
when they decided that they could not share
their concerns about what had happened with
their partner/family: “It can be scary working
with hostile and aggressive parents and (my)
family worry about my safety if I tell them
about these situations”.
44
45. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Fear of seeing the family, and a desire to
avoid them, was reported by 46 respondents,
with concerns for some that they were not
properly protecting the child because of this.
Palpable physical fear of the parents was
mentioned by 18 people.
45
46. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• “ (I) can sometimes find it difficult to challenge
these parents even when I know that it is
required to improve the child’s life. This really
make me feel incompetent and guilty-it also
knocks my confidence.”
• “Feeling stressed about going to work not
wanting to meet parents without support i.e.
another colleague present”.
46
47. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Support and training
• The survey explored the support staff
experienced in relation to the effects and
stresses set out above. This is of particular
importance because of the finding that 67% of
respondents believed that dealing with such
parents had a negative impact on their work
and their own families.
47
48. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Key issues raised by respondents in the open-
ended responses were:
• Poor frequency and adequacy of supervision
• inadequate or no responses to the
perpetrator(s)
• Lack of support for joint visits to known
aggressive families
48
49. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Parents not having clear messages from the
agency about what behaviour was acceptable
to their staff, and actions that might result if
this was breached
• No time to debrief.
49
50. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• One finding was that an often unrecognized
form of aggression is parents’ use of
aggravated complaints. 77% of respondents
had been threatened with complaints. Many
of these will be justified and appropriate, but
some at least are meant to threaten the
worker, in attempts to divert the worker from
working effectively with them on the abuse.
50
51. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• “Adults who deliberately exploit the
vulnerability of children can behave in devious
and menacing ways. They will often go to
great lengths to hide their activities from
those concerned for the well-being of a child.
Staff often have to cope with the
unpredictable behaviour of people in the
parental role…
51
52. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• …and It is a job which carries risks, because in
every judgement they make, those staff have
to balance the rights of a parent with that of
the protection of the child” (Lord Laming
2003:13).
52
53. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• “Agencies should be aware of the concept of
professionals unwittingly colluding in the
ongoing abuse of children. In this case the
review panel believed that the mother’s
learning disability led to a tendency to
minimise the experiences of the children and
the mother’s inability to change and improve”
53
54. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• On the co-operation end of the continuum
families showed neutrality or a willingness to
engage with agencies and seek help. On the
other end of the continuum researchers
described lack of co-operation as including
‘hostility, avoidance of contact, many missed
appointments, disguised or partial compliance,
ambivalent or selective co-operation’ (Brandon et
al, 2008, p.89). In 68 percent of the 47 case
reviews there was evidence of a lack of co-
operation from families often manifested in
overt hostility towards staff, including threats.
54
55. The effects of aggressive and
resistant parents
• Post-incident reviews - Health and social care
provider organisations should collate, analyse
and synthesise all data about violent events
and the use of restrictive interventions, share
this information with the teams and services
involved and the trust board or equivalent
organisational governing body, and involve
service users in the process. They should link
the information to the standards set in
safeguarding procedures.
55
56. References
Brandon, M., Bailey, S., Belderson, P., Gardner, R., Sidebottom, P., Dodsworth, J., Warren, C. and Black, J.
(2009) Understanding Serious Case Reviews and their Impact: A Biennial Analysis of Serious Case
Reviews 2005-7. London: Department for Children Schools and Families.
Littlechild, B. Social Work with Involuntary Clients in Child Protection Work. In The Carrot or the Stick?
Towards effective Practice with Involuntary Clients in Safeguarding Child Work, Edited by Martin
Calder, Russell House Publishing, 2008
NISW (1999) Violence Against Social Workers. Briefing Paper 26. London: NISW.
Pahl, J. (1999) Coping With Physical Violence and Verbal Abuse. In Balloch, S., McLean, J. and Fisher, M.
(Eds.) Social Services: Working Under Pressure. Bristol: Policy Press.
Community Care. 2011. Special report: Hostile and Intimidating parents. 17 November 2011: 4-5 and
18-20 (http://www.communitycare.co.uk/articles/16/11/2011/117763/most-social-workers-
threatened-in-past-six-months.htm)
• Harris, B, and Leather, P. 2012. Levels and Consequences of Exposure to Service user violence:
Evidence from sample of UK Social Care staff, British Journal of Social 42, 851-869
• Holmes D. Rudge, T. and Peron, A. (eds) (2012) Rethinking violence in health care settings, Ashgate,
Farnham
• LAMING, H, (2003) The Victoria Climbié Inquiry: report of an inquiry by Lord Laming, Stationery
Office, London
56
57. References
• Littlechild, B. (2005a) “The Stresses Arising from Violence,
Threats and Aggression against Child Protection Social
Workers”, Journal of Social Work 5: 61-82
• Littlechild, B. (2005b) “The Nature and Effects of Violence
against Child-Protection Social Workers: Providing Effective
Support”, British Journal of Social Work, 35: 387-401
• Littlechild, B. (2009) “Child Protection Social Work: Risks of
Fears and Fears of Risks – Impossible Tasks from Impossible
Goals?’ In Denney, D. (ed) Living in Dangerous Times: Fear,
Insecurity, Risk and Social Policy 103-115, Wiley-Blackwell:
Chichester
57
58. References
• O’Hagan, K. & Dillenburger , K. ( 1995), The abuse of
women within child care work, Buckingham: Open
University Press
• Robson, A., Cossar, J. and Quayle, E. (2014) “The Impact of
Work-Related Violence towards Social Workers in Children
and Family Services”, British Journal of Social Work, doi:
10.1093/bjsw/bcu015 First published online: March 2, 2014
• Tuck, V. (2013). Resistant Parents in Child Protection:
Knowledge Base, Pointers for Practice, and Implications for
Policy. Child Abuse Review, 22(1), 5-20
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