Risk of Harm Indicators

Risk of Harm Indicators

<p> Risk of Harm Indicators</p><p>Basic physical or psychological needs</p><p>In children</p><p>! poor standards of hygiene ! scavenging or stealing food ! extreme longing for adult affection ! no genuine interaction ! anxiety about being abandoned ! self-comforting behaviour eg rocking, sucking ! failure to thrive ! delay in developmental milestones ! loss of “skin bloom” and poor hair texture</p><p>In parents and caregivers </p><p>! failure to provide food, shelter, clothing or hygienic living conditions ! leaving child without appropriate supervision ! inability to respond emotionally to child ! withholding physical contact or stimulation for long periods of time ! scapegoating one child ! failure to provide psychological nurturing ! absence of social support from relatives, other adults or support systems Necessary medical care</p><p>In children</p><p>! untreated injuries ! symptoms of illness or poor health which may be harmful ! if left untreated ! failure to thrive</p><p>In parents and caregivers </p><p>! comments or behaviour indicating that the parent is unwilling or unable to arrange necessary ! medical care for the child Physical abuse and ill-treatment</p><p>In children</p><p>! bruising of the face, head and neck ! lacerations or welts from physical discipline or excessive ! restraint ! explanations which do not fit the injury ! bruising showing the cause of the injury eg belt mark ! large bite marks ! multiple bruises or injuries ! ingestion of poisonous substances ! ruptured internal organs without trauma ! dislocations, sprains , twistings ! broken bones, especially in under threes ! burns and scalds ! head injuries including drowsiness and vomiting, fits or eye bleeding</p><p>In parents and caregivers </p><p>! admitting that they fear they may injure the child ! family history of violence to children ! suffering abuse as a child or young person ! often taking child to doctor with injuries ! delaying seeking help for the child ! giving inconsistent accounts of the injury ! giving unbelievable accounts of the injury Sexual abuse and ill-treatment</p><p>In children</p><p>! tears, bleeding or bruising to the genitalia ! sexually transmitted diseases trauma to breasts, buttocks, lower abdomen or thighs ! descriptions of sexual acts ! age inappropriate behaviours ! regression in developmental achievements ! contact with a known sexual perpetrator</p><p>Stress</p><p>! nightmares and bedwetting ! marked changes in behaviour or mood, tantrums, aggressiveness, withdrawal ! complaints of hedaches or stomach aches with no physical ! findings</p><p>In parents and caregivers </p><p>! intentional exposure of children to sex acts ! exposing a child to prostitution or pornography ! previous history of sexual abuse ! not allowing child appropriate independence ! coercing a child to engage in sexual actswith other ! children ! verbal threats of sexual abuse Domestic violence</p><p>Children are at risk of serious psychological harm when:</p><p>! there is repetition or increased frequency or severity of ! the violence in a household ! a child has been physically harmed ! a partner requires medical attention ! weapons have been used ! police have attended the house, there is an AVO issued or ! breached.</p><p>Other things to consider are:</p><p>! Is the carer able to protect the child? ! Are there other factors present such as drugs, mental health problems or disability which may make it harder to protect the child and increase his/her risk of harm? Serious psychological harm</p><p>In children</p><p>! lack of trust in people ! lack of interpersonal skills ! extreme attention seeking behaviour ! other behavioural disorders eg bullying, aggressiveness, ! disruptiveness</p><p>In parents and caregivers </p><p>! constant criticism, belittling, teasing of a child, ignoring or ! withholding praise or affection ! excessive or unreasonable demands ! severe verbal abuse, rejection and scapegoating ! belief that the particular child is “bad” or “evil” ! using inappropriate physical or social isolation as ! punishment ! behaviour in situations which can harm the child’s safety, ! welfare or well-being</p>

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    6 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us