“I never relax. I rarely feel the absence of stress and I’m knackered. I feel like this situation is killing me.”
This is just one experience, shared with us at Sense, from a parent trying to navigate the children’s social care system. It’s shocking, but far from unique – the children’s social care system is failing disabled children and their families, and it needs to change.
Disabled children’s social care exists to help children and their families to live happy, fulfilling lives. It can support with personal care, home adaptations, funding contributions to access hobbies that are inclusive, such as one-to-one swimming lessons, and access to day centres. It can be life-changing, helping children to get the best start in life, and giving parents a well-deserved break and respite. But to get this support parents must navigate a confusing, fragmented system, and it is taking a serious toll on families.
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Currently, to access support, families must contend with a patchwork of systems straddling social care, health and education, governed by laws dating back decades, and delivered by various departments working in silos. Multiple assessments are often needed and delays are common, with new research from Sense showing the average family waits more than 200 days to even be seen by children’s social services.
Being seen by a social worker isn’t a guarantee of support. One mother told us she made four applications for a social care assessment before a social worker came to see her and her deaf-blind son, meaning he missed out on vital early years’ support.
When the assessment was finally carried out, years after first applying, the family was told that they were coping without intervention from children’s social care and left them to it. With 1.8 million disabled children living in the UK, and just 32,150 of those assessed by social services last year, the number of children missing out on support is potentially colossal.