As part of the Child and Young Person Visitor trial program we asked a group of young people who used to live in residential care what being safe in residential care means to them. Their answers were both expected and surprising.
Together with Relationships Australia South Australia we sat down with these young care leavers to get a better understanding about what young people think constitutes being safe in residential care and how the role of the Child and Young Person Visitor scheme could help in recognising and responding to safety issues.
We discovered that being safe doesn’t just mean living in an environment free from physical harm, but it also means being supported by a network of people who accept you for who you are and help you overcome the challenges that life brings. Trust and feeling in control of your life was also a strong driver in feeling safe.
The findings from what the young people told us were summarised in the Safety in Residential Care report and fell into three distinct themes.
Stability and security
Young people said being safe is not being re-traumatised by sudden changes, unexpected situations or stressful environments. It is knowing what is going to happen in your life, having routines and habits, and having strong and consistent relationships.
“Knowing who will be in the house, kids and workers. And knowing how long you’ll be somewhere.” – Young care leaver, when asked about what safety is.
Belonging and support
Young care leavers discussed being safe as a sense of belonging to a group, community and/or culture. It meant being welcome, loved and supported, being included, cared for, consoled and celebrated. They said having a comforting and comfortable, personal and homely environment plays an important role in this.
“Carers who actually care.” – Young care leaver, asked what would have made them feel safer in residential care.
Trust and ownership
According to young care leavers, being safe is being respected and trusted by those who care for them; and having a reasonable degree of freedom and a say in decisions that affect them. This leads to a sense of ownership over their lives and a greater feeling of empowerment, as well as a greater degree of independence and resilience.
“Having a say. Having input. Having control over your life and environment.” – Young care leaver.
How can the visitor scheme recognise and respond to issues in a residential care facility?
The young people we spoke to shared a number of ways the visitor scheme could work in recognising and responding to safety issues in residential care facilities.
The visiting advocate should:
- educate the young people about their rights and where to get help if they need it
- visit a facility regularly and by the same advocate each time
- look at the facility itself, how it looks, whether it is maintained, how comfortable and ‘homely’ it is
- assess the safety of the neighbourhood in which the facility is located
- not ask directly about whether a young person is safe but ask simple questions that align with the concepts of safety
- be clear with children and young people about confidentiality in what they have shared
- talk to the workers to get a feel for the relationship between workers and young people
- assess the behaviour of the young people, being mindful of trauma responses (eg self-harm)
- always ask what young people think and what they want to happen.
Download the Safety in Residential Care report.
If you missed last week’s article about young people sharing their view about living in residential care catch up on our blog.
Next week we will look into the trial program’s final report and the formal recommendations we have provided to the Department for Child Protection and the Minister for consideration.