| The Selby & Mills Choosing with
Care Programme is designed to help every care provider, who faces a common
challenge: how to ensure that arrangements for protecting service users
and staff from abuse are effective. This applies to all service users
– children, adults and the elderly - and includes the staff and
volunteers who care for them. At the heart of this challenge lie the fundamental
issues of risk assessment and workforce development.
There are 3 components to the Programme which,
used together, are designed to ensure the highest standards of Care are
in place: - |
‘Working with Care – A Guide
to protecting the vulnerable from abuse’.
Written by Philip Darling, Colin Selby &
Graham Mills
Forward by Paul Burstow MP
Based on extensive research, this practical
guidebook provides:
- A coherent framework setting out the seven critical
areas any organisation needs to address in developing and sustaining
a safe environment
- Practical checklists for assessing risks and workforce
development needs in each of the critical areas
- Guidance on how to use the checklists to conduct a
review and develop an action plan
- An introduction to a separate facility, which is complementary
to this Guide, for the provision of an on-line Risk Assessment Audit
Survey
- An illustrative case study, plus a detailed
listing of organisations and other resources about the prevention of
abuse.
Its uses are wide ranging, including:
- Training and developing staff
- Building an aware culture and shared understanding
of any organisation’s approach to the issue of abuse and its management
- Evaluating any organisation’s performance and
progress towards abuse free service provision
- Identifying and sharing best practice within
and across organisations.
“Really exciting… very comprehensive
and valuable.”
Sylvia Bridge, Hounslow Housing &
Community Services.
Purchase a copy or download an extract by clicking
here |
Risk Assessment Survey
Survey-Guided development has long been regarded as one of the most effective
ways to raise awareness and standards of excellence in service in organisations
of all kinds. The guidebook is complemented by a separate Survey questionnaire,
which evaluates the risk awareness of staff and identifies the major areas
for developmental attention in order to provide excellence in Care and
protection of the vulnerable. Selby & Mills offer the Survey online
at a low cost to all organisations in the Social Care, Health and Education
sectors.
It provides a fully comprehensive 16 page report which
highlights 163 issues which might threaten service excellence, based on
the opinions of the people doing the work and provides the basis for planning
and priority identification in service development. It is appropriate
for staff at all levels and in all work activities in the Care sector.
The survey is available as a standard questionnaire,
in a modularised version so the user may be selective about which of the
seven critical areas in the provision of care and service development
they assess, or in a version specifically tailored to their organisation.
“I’m glad we used this. The survey
results and follow up review were really useful.”
Brian Murphy, Catholic Children’s
Society.
Example Risk Assessment
Survey Report - 163kb (PDF)
|
| Fair Care Questionnaire
This psychometric questionnaire is currently
undergoing final development. It is designed to screen applicants for
employment in the Social Care, Health and Education sectors, in order
to determine whether they will fulfill the requirements of the Carer job
description, including whether they may be, or become, abusive in their
relations with those in their care.
This important innovation will assist organisations
by providing a detailed and objective report about the candidate, including
sample questions to ask in the Interview. This employment sector is the
most diverse and poorly qualified in the UK, as well as being one of the
most populous. The assessment will be appropriate for all staff in residential
or community based work and at all levels, so long as they have direct
contact with service users.
We are seeking a few additional organisations to
contribute to validation trials for this highly important addition to the
sector’s employment activity. If you would like to participate or
be kept informed about this development, please contact us.
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Critical areas
The seven critical areas in the provision of Care and service development
are the basis for the ‘Choosing with Care’ Programme. These
are described in detail in the guidebook ‘Working with Care’
and assessed by the ‘Risk Assessment Survey’.
Protecting the vulnerable from abuse – the
seven critical areas
1. Awareness, Culture &
Values
Refers to the ‘consciousness’ of an organisation as a whole
about the issue of abuse and the extent to which it is well informed on
the matter. It is the starting point for developing an appropriate cultural
system and set of values and their consistency with current understanding
of the effective management of abuse. It also includes the way in which
the organisation demonstrates its commitment to its service users and
the public. |
 |
2. Resources
Resources refer not only to internal factors including employees, finance,
processes, equipment, supplies, buildings but also external factors such
as access to specialist help and advice. Together they combine to create
the environment in which services are provided.
3. Policies & Procedures
Policies and procedures embrace the principles underlying an organisation’s
approach to the issue of abuse and the course(s) of action to be followed.
They also provide the basis for gathering information and monitoring and
evaluating performance
4. Recruitment & Selection
Recruitment and selection are concerned with identifying, attracting,
choosing and engaging suitable people to meet staffing requirements. Although
inextricably linked, they can be regarded as separate activities. Thus,
whereas recruitment is primarily concerned with ensuring an adequate supply
of potential recruits, the focus of selection is on the assessment of
a candidate’s capacity to fulfil job requirements and contribute
to the organisation. This section is therefore broken down into the areas
of recruitment, selection, interviewing, contracting and use of agencies.
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5. Training & Development
The use of the term training and development here is used broadly to embrace
any process, formal or informal, by which people acquire attitudes, knowledge
and skills relevant to their performance at work. It includes education
linked to the workplace, learning at both the individual and organisational
level, training on and off the job, and development activities concerned
with helping people realise their potential.
6. Management & Supervision
The particular emphasis here is on the management of people and the extent
to which managers and supervisors are well informed on the issue of abuse,
set clear expectations for the conduct of their staff, ensure that staff
are trained to fulfil them, and regularly review performance as a basis
for continuously developing the quality of service provision.
7. Action on Abuse.
Action on abuse extends from the adoption of a policy of zero tolerance
to the definition of individual responsibilities, development of clear
procedures for conduct, and arrangements for dealing with allegations
and instances of abuse. In addition management needs to be aware of the
risks, incidence and costs of its occurrence. |