Improving the Health and Wellbeing of Young People Leaving Care

Stress has a major impact on the lives of young people leaving care, according to a new book based on extensive research.

The cumulative effects of being taken into care and therefore misplaced from their families frequently takes its toll when young people leave the care of social services to find their place in the adult world.

This is one of the many important findings resulting from the extensive research of Dr Bob Broad and colleagues at De Montfort University, Leicester. He has published the results of his work in a new book: Improving the Health and Wellbeing of Young People Leaving Care.

Dr Broad explains: “Often these young people are more vulnerable than their peers and the majority of them cited stress as a major issue in their lives. Sometimes, the impact of events in their earlier lives has not been dealt with. For example, many of them come from often violent and abusive family backgrounds or they may have experienced bullying at school. When they suddenly leave the relative comfort of care and are living in isolation, their loneliness is exacerbated and issues that have been hiding under the surface come into play.”

Family relationships were a major cause of stress for this group, who also cite lack of money, their relationship with their partner and feeling unsafe in their new accommodation as reasons for stress.

“It is tough for many young people leaving care, trying to fend for themselves in limited circumstances. They may lack self-esteem which can draw them into unsuitable relationships and make them feel unable to move on. Many of the people we interviewed were very unhappy with where they lived – often in unpleasant accommodation in areas where they felt unsafe.”

Though Dr Broad accepts that many teenagers take risks with things such as drugs misuse and unprotected sex, he found that the effect of these behaviours on youngsters leaving care was more marked.

“It is not a question of lack of knowledge – some vulnerable care leavers become involved in risky behaviours such as unprotected sex and drugs misuse, and this can be harmful to their already difficult lives.”

Dr Broad’s book includes the results of two studies. First, the impact of the Children (Leaving Care) Act 2000 on the health and well-being of care leavers is reviewed via the lens of research data gathered from a national overview study of leaving care work by 52 leaving care teams working with 7000 care leavers in England and Wales.

The second research study is a unique two-year young people's health and well-being study highlighting care leavers' own perspectives about their health and well-being needs and service provision.

“We interviewed young people in some detail about what leaving care meant for them, how they coped and how they felt they could have been helped better. We also carried out a special case study on mothers and mothers-to-be, plus sections on mental health needs and disabled care.

“Since 2000 there has been a slight change in the education and training made available to this group – it is an area where there has been much improvement. It is also clear that colleagues who work with young people need to be better appreciated by their employers and better supported with training and opportunities for progression and development.”

A major emphasis of the book is to record what services work well to improve young people's health and well being, as well as to flag up what more needs to be done.

Based on a social inclusion framework, Professor Broad’s book
• analyses the rationale of current and recent leaving care legislation, and the linkages between social exclusion, care leavers, and health and well-being.
• assesses the impact of the Children (Leaving Care) Act 2000 on the education, employment, training, accommodation and financial circumstances of care leavers, as well as on anti-discriminatory practices and service planning developments (including Pathway Planning).
• provides accounts of young people's perspectives on their health and well-being and the impact of often damaging life histories on their current well-being; and a case study of young mothers and mothers-to-be.
• outlines the challenges and a policy framework for meeting the mental health needs of care leavers.
• examines health and well-being issues for disabled care leavers.
• based on the research findings, including points made by the young people who participated, makes good practice recommendations for health and social practitioners, including a new comprehensive policy, practice and service framework.

“My research has led to two clear recommendations - for professionals to respond earlier to young people's accounts, often of damaging abusive episodes in their lives and, at a national level, for a comprehensive system of UK health and well-being indicators for all children and young people, including care leavers, to be introduced as a matter of urgency,” concludes Dr Broad.


Dr Bob Broad is Professor of Children and Families Research, and Director of the Children and Families Research Unit in the Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, at De Montfort University, Leicester. Previous books include Young People Leaving Care: Life after the Children Act 1989 (Jessica Kingsley, 1998) and Kinship care: the placement choice for children and young people in need (Ed. 2001, Russell House).

Dr Panos Vostanis, Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at the University of Leicester, and Julie Harris, social care researcher, each contribute an extra chapter.

Improving the Health and Wellbeing of Young People Leaving Care (Russell House Publishing), £17.95, ISDN . 1-903855-62-4. www.russellhouse.co.uk


   


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