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Non-Departmental Publication (News and Communications)
HM Revenue & Customs

Aug. 20 2024

Source Page: Extend Child Benefit for your teen by 31 August
Document: Extend Child Benefit for your teen by 31 August (webpage)

Found: Parents have less than 2 weeks to tell HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) their 16-19 year-old is continuing


Deposited Papers

Jun. 10 2008

Source Page: The Child Health Promotion Programme: pregnancy and the first five years of life. 80 p.
Document: DEP2008-1489.pdf (PDF)

Found: The Child Health Promotion Programme: pregnancy and the first five years of life. 80 p.


Non-Departmental Publication (News and Communications)
HM Revenue & Customs

Sep. 25 2024

Source Page: Make September birth boom a bank account boon
Document: Make September birth boom a bank account boon (webpage)

Found: (HMRC) is urging parents to claim their Child Benefit entitlement.


Parliamentary Research
Child Maintenance Service statistics - CBP-10082
Aug. 23 2024

Found: P ensions estimated there were 2.4 million separated families in Great Britain , and 3.8 million


Deposited Papers
Cabinet Office

Jan. 10 2008

Source Page: Think family: improving the life chances of families at risk. 31 p.
Document: DEP2008-0058.pdf (PDF)

Found: Think family: improving the life chances of families at risk. 31 p.


Written Question
Infant Mortality
Thursday 17th October 2024

Asked by: Deirdre Costigan (Labour - Ealing Southall)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, what steps his Department is taking to improve care for families after (a) pregnancy loss and (b) the death of a baby.

Answered by Karin Smyth - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care)

The Government is committed to delivering compassionate care for women, and supporting parents who have experienced any type of baby loss. Many trusts have specialist bereavement midwives, who are trained to care for and support parents and families who have suffered the loss of their baby. All trusts are signed up to The National Bereavement Care Pathway, which acts as a set of standards and guidance that trusts should follow when a patient has suffered a baby loss. Baby Loss Certificates are now available for all historic and future pregnancy losses, should parents wish to record and receive a certificate to recognise their loss.

Paid Parental Bereavement Leave was introduced in 2020. This entitlement is available to parents who lose a child under 18 years old, including where a baby is stillborn after 24 weeks of pregnancy.

Following the death of a baby, there are a number of different investigation and review routes available depending on the age of the baby and the circumstances surrounding the death. These include the Maternity and Newborn Safety Investigations Programme, the Perinatal Mortality Review tool, and the Child Death Review process. These reviews aim to provide answers for bereaved parents about why their baby died and learning for the healthcare system.


Scottish Government Publication (Research and analysis)
Children and Families Directorate

Aug. 14 2024

Source Page: Early Learning and Childcare Expansion to 1140 hours: Interim Evaluation Report
Document: Early Learning and Childcare Expansion to 1140 hours: Interim Evaluation Report (webpage)

Found: Early Learning and Childcare Expansion to 1140 hours: Interim Evaluation Report


Departmental Publication (News and Communications)
Department of Health and Social Care

Oct. 09 2024

Source Page: Certificates recognising heartbreak of losing a baby extended
Document: Certificates recognising heartbreak of losing a baby extended (webpage)

Found: support for women and their families All parents who have experienced losing a pregnancy can apply


Scottish Parliament Written Question
S6W-29885
Wednesday 25th September 2024

Asked by: MacGregor, Fulton (Scottish National Party - Coatbridge and Chryston)

Question

To ask the Scottish Government what support it provides to young people who have been involved in serious offending, particularly those who are at risk of being placed in secure care, and how it supports the families of these young people.  

Answered by None

The Scottish Government works closely with local authorities, third sector partners and all other agencies involved in supporting children and young people involved with the criminal justice system. This includes support for parents and carers. This collaborative approach ensures that a broad range of expertise and resources are brought together to address the needs of young people holistically. By partnering with organisations that provide specialised services such as mental health support, family counselling, and education, the Scottish Government ensures that young people receive the targeted interventions they need to prevent reoffending and to successfully reintegrate into society.

This includes organisations such as Cyrenians and Aberlour, which receive funding through the Cashback for Communities programme. Cyrenians’ Keeping Families Together project works across Scotland in partnership with Scotland’s four secure centres, offering mediation, whole family support and conflict resolution workshops. The approach enables young people and families to improve communication, address underlying issues and build stronger, more positive relationship.

Aberlour’s project, Alternative Routes #CashBack, supports young people aged 10-25 and their families most at risk of being involved in antisocial behaviour, offending or reoffending. They use a whole system approach involving the whole family and community, which improves confidence in young people and provides them with opportunities to connect, flourish and achieve at home, school, and in the community.

Includem’s ADAPT project – funded through the Scottish Government’s Whole Family Wellbeing Fund – also focuses on young people who are in conflict or at risk of being in conflict with the law. The project works with young people and their families to help them navigate a way out of a variety of difficult circumstances by diverting them from the criminal behaviour and a resultant trajectory into the criminal justice system.

The Scottish Government also funds the Children and Young People’s Centre for Justice (CYCJ), who work closely with a number of organisations providing a range of support services to both children and their parents and carers. This includes local authority practitioners, Police Scotland and third sector organisations such as Action for Children, Includem and Barnardos.

As part of their Promise implementation work, CYCJ is leading a project to engage directly with parents of children in conflict with the law. The aim of this is to develop a network of parents who can participate in the development of policy and practice. In order to reach these parents CYCJ is actively engaging with existing parenting networks such as Parenting Across Scotland and Families Outside.

The Scottish Government also ensure that child victims and their families are offered trauma-informed and person-centred support and advocacy through the Victim-Centred Approach Fund and the development of a Bairns’ Hoose model in Scotland.

The Intensive Support Monitoring and Supervision (ISMS) programme is a key component of Scotland’s youth justice system, aimed at providing an alternative to secure care or custody for young people (typically between the ages of 12 and 18) who are at high risk of reoffending or presenting significant risks to themselves or others. ISMS combines electronic monitoring (such as tagging) with intensive support services, including:

  • Structured supervision with regular check-ins and monitoring by social workers or case managers.
  • Individualised interventions including tailored programmes focusing on addressing offending behaviour, mental health, substance abuse, or other personal challenges.
  • Support with education and employment including assistance in engaging with school, vocational training, or employment to foster personal development and reduce reoffending risks.
  • Family support with efforts to involve and support the family in the rehabilitation process.

This programme allows young people involved in offending behaviour to remain in their communities under strict conditions, while receiving the support needed to change their behaviour, rather than being placed in a secure unit or prison. ISMS is considered a more rehabilitative and community-based approach to managing serious offending.

Where a child is placed in secure accommodation, centres will utilise a range of interventions, supports and strategies to meet their needs, ensure their safety is maintained and risk is managed. Throughout a child’s stay in secure care they will be supported to participate in education; interventions identified as part of their Child’s Plan; with required health supports and recreational, leisure and social activities.

In terms of direct financial support, the Scottish Government’s policy towards local authority spending is to allow each local authority the financial freedom to operate independently. As such, the vast majority of local authority funding is provided by means of a block grant. It is then for individual local authorities to manage their own budgets. They allocate the total financial resources available to them, including support for youth work, on the basis of local needs and priorities, having first fulfilled their statutory obligations and the jointly agreed set of national and local priorities.


Scottish Government Publication (Advice and guidance)
Learning Directorate

Sep. 12 2024

Source Page: School uniform and clothing: a summary of guidance for schools and education authorities
Document: Publication of school uniform and clothing guidance - A summary of guidance for schools and education authorities (PDF)

Found: School uniform and clothing: a summary of guidance for schools and education authorities