ending institutionalisation

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Ending institutionalisation Ensuring better outcomes for children

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Ending institutionalisation. Ensuring better outcomes for children. A European problem. One million children in institutions in the European region due to poverty, ethnicity, disability Institutionalisation causes severe harm to the health and development of children - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ending  institutionalisation

Ending institutionalisation

Ensuring better outcomes for children

Page 2: Ending  institutionalisation

A European problem

• One million children in institutions in the European region due to poverty, ethnicity, disability

• Institutionalisation causes severe harm to the health and development of children

• Outcomes are extremely poor – 10 times more likely to be trafficked; high levels of suicide, criminality, involvement in prostitution

Page 3: Ending  institutionalisation

The Solution

• Strengthened/more accessible universal services (community health and education)

• A range of targeted community based services that support the family

• A continuum of substitute family care• Specialist residential care in small group homes for

minority of children with complex needs• Changes in attitudes – society, politicians, professionals• Reinvestment of resources

Page 4: Ending  institutionalisation

Changes in development when moved from institutions to foster care

Page 5: Ending  institutionalisation

Changes in behaviour on moving from institution to foster care

Page 6: Ending  institutionalisation

Challenges and pitfalls

Getting from where we are now to where we want to be – negative unintended consequences

• Setting target for 50% reduction • - easy to place children (cheaper services)• - reduce staffing and budget• - amalgamate institutions• - inappropriate placements and trauma• - reduced overall budget spent on children• - insufficient funding available for children with

disabilities

Page 7: Ending  institutionalisation

Challenges and pitfalls

• Limited placement options• - continued reliance on too much residential

care (expensive services, poorer outcomes)• - insufficient focus on family support• - reform considered too expensive

Page 8: Ending  institutionalisation

Challenges and pitfalls

• Focus on buildings• - inappropriate use of buildings for new

services• - costly investment in such buildings• - poor outcomes for children

Page 9: Ending  institutionalisation

Challenges and pitfalls

• Insufficient funding for the whole reform process• - results in partial reform – usually the most

vulnerable children are left behind• - running two parallel systems – reform is seen as

too expensive• - overall numbers in care rise• - need for proper costing of reform and

understanding of cost benefit

Page 10: Ending  institutionalisation

Challenges and pitfalls

• Statistics disguising the real situation• - some children not included in statistics on

institutionalisation – therefore no plans for them

• - over-estimation or under-estimation – a challenge for planning for future need

• - numbers in institutions do not show the dynamic flow through the system

Page 11: Ending  institutionalisation

Challenges and pitfalls

• Different message and priorities from international donors and policy makers

• - conflicting reform programmes• - inefficient use of funding• - increases resistance to reform

Page 12: Ending  institutionalisation

Lumos’ approach

Page 13: Ending  institutionalisation

10 elements of deinstitutionalisation

Page 14: Ending  institutionalisation

Admissions/year per 10,000 of child population

England Bulgaria Montenegro Sweden0

5

10

15

20

25

30

5

25

18

9

Per 10,000

Page 15: Ending  institutionalisation

Number of children in residential care/10,000

England Bulgaria Sweden Montenegro0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

10

85

20 20

Per 10,000

Page 16: Ending  institutionalisation

GDP per capita (USD)

United Kingdom Bulgaria Sweden Montenegro0

5,000

10,000

15,000

20,000

25,000

30,000

35,000

40,000

36,495

13,332

37,904

13,929

GDP per capita USD

Page 17: Ending  institutionalisation

Cost per child per year of different forms of care

Sweden cost/year € UK cost/year € -

20,000

40,000

60,000

80,000

100,000

120,000

140,000

160,000

180,000

200,000

177,823

109,590

46,181 37,981

14,828

4,100

Residential careFoster careAt home with support

Page 18: Ending  institutionalisation

Under-estimated need in DI

• Communication strategy• Management structure and resources• Professional development• Transitional costs• Community involvement• Self-advocacy • Partnership with parents• Frontline social work