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Enabling risk and ensuring safety: self-directed support and personal budgets

Enabling risk and ensuring safety: self-directed support and personal budgets Purpose - This paper aims to present a digest of the main discussion points and key findings from a recent Social Care Institute for Excellence report on risk enablement and safeguarding in the context of self-directed support and personal budgets. Design/methodology/approach - The paper explores how the personalisation agenda and adult safeguarding can work together in policy and practice and addresses some of the frontline concerns about empowerment and duty of care. Findings - Evidence on how self-directed support and personal budgets can be used to enable people to take positive risks while staying safe and emerging practice is examined. It suggests that person-centred working in adult safeguarding, along with the mechanism of self-directed support planning and outcome review, can support the individual to identify the risks they want to take and those they want to avoid in order to stay safe. It is clear that if frontline practitioners are overly occupied with protecting organisations and individuals from financial abuse, this will impact on the capacity of those practitioners exercising their duty of care at the front line. This means that practitioners are less able to engage with individuals to identify safeguarding issues and enable positive risk taking. Defensive risk management strategies or risk-averse frontline practice may then result in individuals not being adequately supported to make choices and take control and, therefore, being put at risk. Practitioners need to be supported by local authorities to incorporate safeguarding and risk enablement in their relationship-based, person-centred working. Good quality, consistent and trusted relationships and good communication are particularly important for self-directed support and personal budget schemes. Originality/value - The use of "risk enablement panels" and "personalisation and safeguarding frameworks" are two ways to address some of the issues in practice. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Journal of Adult Protection Pier Professional

Enabling risk and ensuring safety: self-directed support and personal budgets

The Journal of Adult Protection , Volume 13 (3) – Jan 1, 2011

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Publisher
Pier Professional
Copyright
Copyright © 2011 by Pier Professional Limited
ISSN
1466-8203
eISSN
2042-8669
DOI
10.1108/14668201111160723
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Purpose - This paper aims to present a digest of the main discussion points and key findings from a recent Social Care Institute for Excellence report on risk enablement and safeguarding in the context of self-directed support and personal budgets. Design/methodology/approach - The paper explores how the personalisation agenda and adult safeguarding can work together in policy and practice and addresses some of the frontline concerns about empowerment and duty of care. Findings - Evidence on how self-directed support and personal budgets can be used to enable people to take positive risks while staying safe and emerging practice is examined. It suggests that person-centred working in adult safeguarding, along with the mechanism of self-directed support planning and outcome review, can support the individual to identify the risks they want to take and those they want to avoid in order to stay safe. It is clear that if frontline practitioners are overly occupied with protecting organisations and individuals from financial abuse, this will impact on the capacity of those practitioners exercising their duty of care at the front line. This means that practitioners are less able to engage with individuals to identify safeguarding issues and enable positive risk taking. Defensive risk management strategies or risk-averse frontline practice may then result in individuals not being adequately supported to make choices and take control and, therefore, being put at risk. Practitioners need to be supported by local authorities to incorporate safeguarding and risk enablement in their relationship-based, person-centred working. Good quality, consistent and trusted relationships and good communication are particularly important for self-directed support and personal budget schemes. Originality/value - The use of "risk enablement panels" and "personalisation and safeguarding frameworks" are two ways to address some of the issues in practice.

Journal

The Journal of Adult ProtectionPier Professional

Published: Jan 1, 2011

Keywords: Personalisation

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