Better communication and more SEND help needed for children

Better communication and more SEND help needed for children



Communication could be improved to avoid โ€œduplication and families having to repeat their stories to different professionalsโ€, and partners could take a lead with families with whom they had built up relationships, โ€œrather than just referring them to the council services all the timeโ€, Stockton Councilโ€™s people select committee heard. And one committee member has expressed worries about the โ€œhorrendousโ€ growing cost of childrenโ€™s services.

The committee has reviewed partnerships in early help in a bid to improve services following the announcement of the Department for Educationโ€™s Families First Partnership Programme, national reforms bringing together social and support workers with other specialists to support families. Councillors heard of a wide range of services including the Childrenโ€™s Hub โ€“ which acts as a โ€œfront doorโ€ for referrals โ€“ along with family hubs, teams, health and voluntary services and projects helping families and young people.

They found โ€œgood working relationshipsโ€ with accessible family hubs bringing together services and information, and professionals offering a โ€œcomprehensive support system for familiesโ€ at the earliest opportunity. But no action was taken on almost two thirds of social care assessments, suggesting โ€œclarity is needed on the triage process at the front doorโ€.

The report says: โ€œInconsistent communication, duplication in services, and gaps in data sharing protocols have been reported, which hinder the effectiveness of partnerships and lead to partners working in silos with the same families. The committee believes that a greater understanding of the different services available along with a more joined-up approach and access to information systems between services is therefore an area for improvement.

โ€œExpanding outreach groups such as fathers and families with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) is also criticalโ€ฆ The offer for SEND families has been highlighted as an area for improvement, with training needed for professionals to understand the needs of SEND children to better equip them to offer the right support, as well as ensuring that support is offered earlier, and there is increased and purposeful communication between families and services, making sure this is well coordinated.โ€

The early help service received 1,311 referrals between November 2024 and January 2025. The report details services used by hundreds of families including parenting programmes, sessions, family group conferencing, youth and school support, NHS care, voluntary and community work, outreach, a police-led early intervention, a Ministry of Justice-funded โ€œturnaroundโ€ programme for children who are arrested but not charged.

Social care assessment teams received an average of 71 referrals a week in May to June 2025, 66% of which resulted in no further action. Staff and events at family hubs were praised in a focus group, and the early help service got good feedback praising its โ€œsupport and empathyโ€ and โ€œa neutral place to meet and you can be open and honest and say what you feelโ€.

However the Stockton Parent Carer Forum, a volunteer service representing parents and carers of children with SEND, said โ€œthe early help offer is poor and they are not involved in the planningโ€, with people finding โ€œprofessionals not understanding the needs of SEND, not offering adequate support and not offering support early enoughโ€. They called for better communication with families and between services, as well as training, practical support, โ€œbuilding relationships, accountability, trust and transparencyโ€, though the forum was involved with the Families First reforms.

The report said: โ€œIt is felt that there is not enough information readily available for families with SEND and parents need to seek out help rather than being signposted to the hubs and early help. It is also felt that dads are missing from the family hub offer, as they need support and to talk to other dads too.โ€

The committee said there was a โ€œstrong commitment to early intervention through a wide range of services and partnershipsโ€. It said: โ€œEvidence gathered throughout the review from partners and service users shows that families value the support they receive.

โ€œHowever, the review also identified areas for improvement, particularly around inconsistencies in communication, data sharing, service duplication, and the clarity of the early help offer for families and professionals. The high rate of no further action following statutory assessments suggests that referrals may not always be appropriately triaged, and that professionals need more confidence and clarity in navigating the early help system.

โ€œThe need for more inclusive and better coordinated support, particularly for those with SEND, has also been highlighted. There has been calls for improved signposting, more targeted programmes, and greater involvement in service planning.โ€

The committee recommended โ€œa culture of shared responsibilitiesโ€ to make sure early help is โ€œeveryoneโ€™s businessโ€ in schools, health and the voluntary sector, as well as a redesign of childrenโ€™s services โ€œfront doorโ€ and advice, training, tools and guidance for schools and others, to get families the right support at the right time and reduce demand. It also recommends more support for people to understand the needs of SEND families, encouragement to use family hubs, systems and assessments โ€œto ensure effective and timely communication between the council and its partnersโ€, a robust data collection system, and the update, relaunch and promotion of online tools โ€œto empower families to access early, universal supportโ€.

At its latest meeting on Monday (December 8), Councillor Clare Besford, cabinet member for children and young people, said the report would benefit children and young people: โ€œI was completely blown away by how in-depth the review was. I think what it really does evidence is that thereโ€™s some excellent partnership working within our early help team already.

โ€œBut I think as a service we would completely accept that there is room for improvement in terms of communication. Itโ€™s one of the key cornerstones of the work thatโ€™s been undertaken with regards to the Families First Partnership and also the work around the Childrenโ€™s Hub and the front door, so I think the review is really timely.โ€

Cllr Barry Woodhouse said: โ€œTo say Iโ€™m more informed now is an understatement. Itโ€™s a brilliant piece of work.

โ€œThe thing that really worries me, though, is the increased costs of childrenโ€™s services. To say itโ€™s frightening is putting it mildly, itโ€™s horrendous.

โ€œHopefully we can get over that hurdle, but with the officers and members working so hard on it, Iโ€™m sure weโ€™ll do our best.โ€

Chair Cllr Marilyn Surtees also thanked officers and the committee, saying: โ€œThis was a very complex review, I found.โ€ The committeeโ€™s report will go to cabinet in January and, if approved, will be followed by an action plan.



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