Sunday, May 22, 2016

Tackling hostile parents part of child protection work

This post came out from The Straits Times (24 April 2016)

Parents are often hostile when the Ministry of Social and Family Development's (MSF) Child Protective Services (CPS) steps in to stop them from abusing their child. And about one in six families challenges the CPS' actions, for example, to remove the child from his parents' care for his own safety. In such cases, the CPS has to get the courts to decide where the child will stay, among other things.  CPS director Carmelia Nathen said bringing cases to court to get a care and protection order is the last resort.

This happens when parents refuse to cooperate with the CPS to address safety concerns or the child. Contested legal proceedings can drag for a few months to a year. Said Ms Nathen: "This is not ideal as the intervention work and services for the family cannot take place expediently".

Ms Nathen told The Sunday Times that the CPS does not take a child away from his parents unless there are serious concerns. Instead, it finds ways to keep the child safe at home - by roping in relatives and social workers, for example, to keep tabs and provide the help that is needed, and getting parents to address the causes that led to the abuse. But if this does not work out, the CPS may move the child.

While parents object to their child being taken away, separation is also traumatic for the child, said child protection officer Firdawati Masri. So the CPS tries to place the child with someone he knows, like a relative or family friend. Otherwise, he is laced in a children's home or with foster parents. Still, as Ms Firdawati noted, some children want to live at home even if they are beaten: "Their parents are the only people they know."

Some abused children stay in foster care or in a children's home for years, until it is safe for them to go home. But a small group do not get to go home at all as their parents have not changed their abusive ways. Ms Nathen said CPS has placed some abused children up for adoption with the parents' consent. But there are also "very few" instances where children are placed for adoption without parental consent.

Thoughts anyone?

Yours,
Something Small Thinking Big

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