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Report of the investigation into the management of allegations of child sexual abuse against adults PDF

308 Pages·2017·3.26 MB·English
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Preview Report of the investigation into the management of allegations of child sexual abuse against adults

Report of the investigation into the management of allegations of child sexual abuse against adults of concern by the Child and Family Agency (Tusla) upon the direction of the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs 14 June 2018 Report of the investigation into the management of allegations of child sexual abuse against adults of concern by the Child and Family Agency (Tusla) upon the direction of the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs Health Information and Quality Authority About the Health Information and Quality Authority The Health Information and Quality Authority (HIQA) is an independent authority established to drive high-quality and safe care for people using our health and social care services in Ireland. HIQA’s role is to develop standards, inspect and review health and social care services and support informed decisions on how services are delivered. HIQA aims to safeguard people and improve the safety and quality of health and social care services across its full range of functions. HIQA’s mandate to date extends across a specified range of public, private and voluntary sector services. Reporting to the Minister for Health and engaging with the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs, HIQA has statutory responsibility for:  Setting Standards for Health and Social Services — Developing person- centred standards, based on evidence and best international practice, for health and social care services in Ireland.  Regulation — Registering and inspecting designated centres.  Monitoring Children’s Services — Monitoring and inspecting children’s social services.  Monitoring Healthcare Safety and Quality — Monitoring the safety and quality of health services and investigating as necessary serious concerns about the health and welfare of people who use these services.  Health Technology Assessment — Providing advice that enables the best outcome for people who use our health service and the best use of resources by evaluating the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of drugs, equipment, diagnostic techniques and health promotion and protection activities.  Health Information — Advising on the efficient and secure collection and sharing of health information, setting standards, evaluating information resources and publishing information about the delivery and performance of Ireland’s health and social care services. 1 Report of the investigation into the management of allegations of child sexual abuse against adults of concern by the Child and Family Agency (Tusla) upon the direction of the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs Health Information and Quality Authority Note on terms and abbreviations used in this report A full range of terms and abbreviations used in this report is contained in a glossary at the end of this report 2 Report of the investigation into the management of allegations of child sexual abuse against adults of concern by the Child and Family Agency (Tusla) upon the direction of the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs Health Information and Quality Authority Contents About the Health Information and Quality Authority 1 Note on terms and abbreviations used in this report 2 Executive summary 5 Recommendations 20 Chapter 1. Introduction and methodology 22 Chapter 2. Setting the scene 36 Chapter 3. Findings on leadership, governance and management 52 Chapter 4. Findings on management of child sexual abuse referrals, including retrospective allegations against adults of concern 85 Chapter 5. Findings on workforce 125 Chapter 6. Findings on use of information 138 Chapter 7. Findings on bilateral engagement between Tusla and An Garda Síochána and other external agencies 146 Chapter 8. Conclusions and recommendations 161 Chapter 9. References 180 Bibliography 186 Appendices 195 Appendix 1 — Terms of Reference for the investigation as approved by the HIQA Board on 8 March 2017 195 Appendix 2 — Request to the Health Information and Quality Authority to carry out an investigation in accordance with Section 9(2) of the Health Act 2007 198 Appendix 3 — Members of the External Advisory Group appointed in line with Section 9(1) of the Health Act 2007 200 Appendix 4 — Formal HIQA data and document requests to Tusla 206 Appendix 5 — Correspondence from HIQA to the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs 218 3 Report of the investigation into the management of allegations of child sexual abuse against adults of concern by the Child and Family Agency (Tusla) upon the direction of the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs Health Information and Quality Authority Appendix 6 — Schedule of inspections by HIQA against the National Standards for Child Protection and Welfare, 2014 to 2016 and published inspection reports 221 Appendix 7 — Tusla organisational chart received as part of this investigation 222 Appendix 8 — Tusla service areas and An Garda Síochána group meetings with members of the HIQA Investigation Team between September 2017 and January 2018 223 Appendix 9 — Schedule of external agencies represented at group meetings with members of the HIQA Investigation Team between June 2017 and January 2018 224 Appendix 10 — HIQA’s review of Tusla’s governance arrangements to ensure an effective, timely and safe service, provided to Tusla in February 2017 and incorporating later amendments following due process (fair procedure) feedback from Tusla 226 Glossary of terms and abbreviations used in the context of this investigation report 298 4 Report of the investigation into the management of allegations of child sexual abuse against adults of concern by the Child and Family Agency (Tusla) upon the direction of the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs Health Information and Quality Authority Executive summary Introduction and background to the investigation On 9 February 2017, RTÉ television broadcast a Prime Time programme which revealed that the Child and Family Agency (Tusla) had sent a notification to An Garda Síochána (the Irish police force) containing a false allegation of child sexual abuse against a garda* whistle-blower, Sergeant Maurice McCabe. Tusla is the State’s child protection and welfare agency, set up in 2014, with around 4,100 employees. In 2017, over 50,800 referrals were made to it. In light of these circumstances and a concern about more systemic issues that may potentially require a response at a national level, the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs believed that the apparent poor handling by Tusla of information in this case indicated a possible ‘serious risk to the health and welfare’ of children who were the subject of child sexual abuse referrals to Tusla, including adults alleging abuse during their childhood where the alleged abuser may pose a risk to current children. As a result, on 2 March 2017, the Minister of Children and Youth Affairs wrote to the Chairperson of the Health Information and Quality Authority (HIQA), formally instructing, in line with the Health Act 2007, (1) that HIQA carry out a statutory investigation under the Act. Furthermore, the Minister instructed HIQA to draw on its existing work in the monitoring of child protection and welfare services. On 8 March 2017, the HIQA Board approved the start of an investigation. This report presents the findings of the HIQA investigation into the local, regional and corporate arrangements provided by Tusla to ensure the effective management of child sexual abuse referrals involving adults of concern, including allegations made by adults who allege they were abused when they were children (these are termed retrospective allegations). The report makes recommendations to improve the safety, quality and standards of services provided by Tusla in relation to referrals of allegations of child sexual abuse involving adults of concern. HIQA’s role in monitoring child protection and welfare services Between 2014 and 2016, HIQA had conducted 12 inspections of Tusla child protection and welfare services, against the National Standards for the Protection and Welfare of Children, including child sexual abuse referrals.** These National Standards were approved by the Minister for Health and the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs in 2012. * Garda — the term for a police officer in Ireland. ** This investigation report refers to 12 inspections carried out by HIQA between 2014 and 2016, while HIQA’s governance review in Appendix 10 reports on 14 inspections in a different time period during these years. 5 Report of the investigation into the management of allegations of child sexual abuse against adults of concern by the Child and Family Agency (Tusla) upon the direction of the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs Health Information and Quality Authority While there was evidence of good practice, particularly around responding to children who were at immediate risk of significant harm, HIQA inspectors found areas of significant concern which demonstrated inconsistencies in how Tusla ensured safe and effective child protection and welfare practice. Examples of poor practice included high levels of unallocated referrals (where a named social worker has not been assigned to a case), unmanaged retrospective referrals, poor record-keeping, inconsistent risk management arrangements and difficulties with retention and recruitment. There were also inadequate quality assurance arrangements to effectively detect, manage and learn from deficiencies in practice identified during HIQA’s monitoring and inspection programme. Despite being brought to the attention of Tusla service areas during each inspection, these common shortfalls continued to emerge in inspections carried out throughout 2014 and 2015. Therefore, HIQA was not assured that the national governance arrangements within Tusla were adequately addressing these deficiencies in a systematic way. Because of this, in December 2015, in line with its powers under the Health Act 2007, HIQA started to review the governance arrangements in Tusla. During the 2015–2017 review, there was evidence of a wide-ranging transformation programme within Tusla and abundant evidence of the considerable financial investment in terms of staff recruitment and training. Tusla had also indicated that it had significantly improved its governance structures. It also found the Child Protection Notification System, introduced in 2015, was accessible on a 24-hour basis across all service areas. However, the 2015–2017 review also found a large number of child protection and welfare referrals that did not have a named social worker allocated to their case. There were inconsistencies in the identification, reporting and escalation of risk; inadequate managerial oversight at a local level, with poor practice and inconsistencies potentially not being actively addressed; and good practice was not being identified and shared. The absence of an integrated information communications technology (ICT) system remained a significant risk to Tusla. There had been inconsistencies in the gathering and storage of data, and social worker recruitment challenges. It is in the context of the findings of HIQA’s earlier governance review of Tusla that the Investigation Team looked at the governance and management structures during its 2017-2018 investigation. 6 Report of the investigation into the management of allegations of child sexual abuse against adults of concern by the Child and Family Agency (Tusla) upon the direction of the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs Health Information and Quality Authority Findings in relation to the management of referrals of child sexual abuse and referrals of retrospective child sexual abuse In conducting this investigation, the HIQA Investigation Team was acutely mindful that the pathway that Tusla uses for managing child sexual abuse referrals is identical to its pathway for managing all child protection and welfare concerns. Therefore, these findings provide an insight into the governance and operational arrangements in place for all child protection and welfare concerns referrals and retrospective cases. The Investigation Team found many examples of good practice by committed Tusla personnel in how they manage allegations of child sexual abuse and retrospective abuse. Similar to earlier inspection findings, Tusla appropriately responded to children who were judged to be at immediate and serious risk of harm. In these situations, there was good cooperation between Tusla and An Garda Síochána in taking protective action to ensure that children were safe. Furthermore, Tusla has strategically developed service-area-based dedicated teams and one regional-based team for retrospective cases and there was evidence to show that this approach is helping to increase the effectiveness of how retrospective child sexual abuse referrals are managed. In line with the Terms of Reference of this investigation and in response to the Minister’s concern as to systemic risk to children, the Investigation Team reviewed the systems in place in six of Tusla’s geographical service areas and in one Sexual Abuse Regional Team (SART) in the Tusla Dublin North East Region to ensure Tusla effectively and safely manages all child sexual abuse referrals, including retrospective referrals. The investigation identified three defective points in Tusla’s system of managing such referrals, which Tusla must now address as a matter of urgency: a. screening and preliminary enquiry b. safety planning c. management of retrospective cases. 7 Report of the investigation into the management of allegations of child sexual abuse against adults of concern by the Child and Family Agency (Tusla) upon the direction of the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs Health Information and Quality Authority A. Screening and preliminary enquiry This investigation found inconsistencies in practice around the screening of allegations and making preliminary enquiries, which meant that not all children at actual or potential risk were being assessed and where necessary, protected by Tusla, in a timely and effective manner. B. Safety planning Inconsistencies in safety-planning practice meant that while some children were adequately safeguarded, others at potential risk were not. Even for children who had a safety plan, these plans were not always reviewed to ensure the continued safety and wellbeing of the child. C. Management of retrospective cases While there was a policy on managing allegations made by adults of abuse during their childhood, it did not include a standardised approach to direct and guide staff in case management, leading to variation in practice and delays. Some people were not told that an allegation of abuse had been made against them and others were given only limited information. The Investigation Team found that while Tusla focused on examining current risks to children, this often resulted in a lack of urgency in responding to retrospective allegations of abuse against adults of concern. This meant that children who are potentially at risk — from adults who are alleged to have abused children in the past, and or who were convicted of child sexual abuse in the past, and who now have access to other children — may be missed. Omitting and or not fully completing any stage in the management of child sexual abuse referrals will invariably impact on the adequacy and or timeliness of any intervention put in place to mitigate risk to vulnerable children. This systemic risk is increased when the child protection and welfare staff who are operationally responsible are unclear about the steps they need to take or fail to adhere to them and or there is no formal guidance in place to begin with. Keeping clear, contemporaneous and accurate records for each child ensures that there is a documented account of decisions taken to protect children. The child’s or adult’s record is an essential source of evidence for investigations and enquiries, and may also be required to be disclosed in court proceedings. Good quality records help with continuity of social work support whenever individual social workers are unavailable or when the named social worker on a case changes, and they provide an essential tool for managers to monitor work practices or for peer review. 8

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HIQA aims to safeguard people and improve the safety and quality of health and . It also found the Child Protection Notification System, introduced in 2015, .. administrative and on overly-bureaucratic tasks, rather than building
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