What Helps? Mothers' and Children's Experiences of Community-Based Early Intervention Programmes for Domestic Violence

McCarry, Melanie, Radford, Lorraine orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-6095-3845 and Baker, Victoria Louise (2021) What Helps? Mothers' and Children's Experiences of Community-Based Early Intervention Programmes for Domestic Violence. Child Abuse Review, 30 (2). pp. 114-129. ISSN 0952-9136

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/car.2671

Abstract

Early help or early intervention is increasingly recommended for safeguarding children living with domestic violence, but little is known about what is effective. This article discusses findings from an evaluation of a pioneering early help service in North West England. This new service aimed to improve the safety and wellbeing of families (mothers and children) who were assessed as below the level of ‘high risk’ domestic violence and below the threshold for a child protection order. Between January 2014 and March 2015, families (473 mothers and 541 children) were identified within multiagency safeguarding hubs and referred to the early help service. The service that emerged was somewhat different to the service expected. This article discusses findings from qualitative data gathered from 39 participants (mothers, children and service providers) involved in the programme. Three main issues emerged as themes from the interviews: the benefits of having any service at all for children living with domestic violence who slip off the agendas of professionals working with child protection and high‐risk domestic violence; the importance of flexibility of key worker‐led service delivery; and the suitability of current group work and therapeutic models for meeting the varied needs of families affected by domestic violence.


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