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More About This Title Child Protection Assessment Following SeriousInjuries to Infants - Fine Judgements
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—Dr Peter Reder, Child Psychiatrist, London
How do child protection professionals and courts make judgments on whether serious injuries to infants are due to abuse? If injuries are considered to be the result of abuse, in what circumstances can it be considered safe for the infant to return home?
Child Protection Assessment Following Serious Injuries to Infants is concerned with helping child protection professionals and courts make the right decisions and avoid errors that can have disastrous consequences for children and families.
Drawing upon the extensive clinical and research experience of the authors, this authoritative text:
- Reviews research on the causes of child abuse and problems in diagnosing abuse.
- Examines the views of parents who consider that they have been wrongly accused of child abuse.
- Draws specific attention to the need to assess potential for change in families and considers in detail how this can be achieved.
- Highlights skills issues that are necessary for undertaking appropriate assessments.
- Identifies key factors that are indicative of reunification in some cases, and factors that contraindicate reunification in others.
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Contact details: [email protected] Richard Green trained as a social worker and family therapist. He has held a number of posts in both local authorities and the NSPCC, including practitioner, manager and evaluation officer. He is currently employed as Senior Consultant within the NSPCC, working with a range of statutory and voluntary agencies to improve the safeguarding of children.
Contact details: rgreen@nspcc,org.uk Ron Fellows trained originally as a social worked, and subsequently as a family/brief therapist. He worked in mental health and children and family services for various
Contact details: [email protected]
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English
Foreword.
Acknowledgements.
1. Introduction.
2. Child Abuse and Child Protection Errors.
3. Child Abuse Research .
4. Child Protection Research.
5. The NSPCC Serious Injury-Discrepant Explanations Research.
6. Family Perceptions of Child Protection Interventions.
7. Explanations for Injuries and the Thorny Issue of 'Denial'.
8. Child Protection Assessment Contexts.
9. Potential for Change.
10. Fine Judgments.
References.
Index.