Left behind: reflections of residential care home managers when children leave

A case study of a children's therapeutic residential care provider consisting of five homes in England was carried out to consider the feelings and reflections of the managers on children leaving the home. This is an unexplored perspective/ subject which considers the significant and emotional...

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Main Authors: Yesha Bhagat, Barbara O'Reilly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: CELCIS 2021-03-01
Series:Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
Subjects:
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author Yesha Bhagat
Barbara O'Reilly
author_facet Yesha Bhagat
Barbara O'Reilly
author_sort Yesha Bhagat
collection DOAJ
description A case study of a children's therapeutic residential care provider consisting of five homes in England was carried out to consider the feelings and reflections of the managers on children leaving the home. This is an unexplored perspective/ subject which considers the significant and emotional transition of leaving care. The reflections in this case study can be used to improve practice for social care providers and give insights into a niche area of work. To explore this topic, a focus group was carried out with four residential home managers and two psychotherapists who work at the same care provider. It was found that the subject of leavers was not much reflected on and it was agreed that it needed to be to improve practice, as well as processing certain unconscious feelings around the child. Failure was a prominent feeling potentially derived from the pressure of ending cycles of failure for the children as well as unconscious projections held by the managers. There were also found to be certain issues around terminology, such as 'planned' and 'unplanned', used in this area of work which holds particular connotations. Lastly, it was found that relationships with local authorities were significant for ensuring healthy transitions.
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publishDate 2021-03-01
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series Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
spelling doaj-art-2c088e2bbabd4240b2ef22a33bb6e9572024-12-05T15:11:59ZengCELCISScottish Journal of Residential Child Care2976-93532021-03-01201517210.17868/strath.00084179Left behind: reflections of residential care home managers when children leave Yesha BhagatBarbara O'ReillyA case study of a children's therapeutic residential care provider consisting of five homes in England was carried out to consider the feelings and reflections of the managers on children leaving the home. This is an unexplored perspective/ subject which considers the significant and emotional transition of leaving care. The reflections in this case study can be used to improve practice for social care providers and give insights into a niche area of work. To explore this topic, a focus group was carried out with four residential home managers and two psychotherapists who work at the same care provider. It was found that the subject of leavers was not much reflected on and it was agreed that it needed to be to improve practice, as well as processing certain unconscious feelings around the child. Failure was a prominent feeling potentially derived from the pressure of ending cycles of failure for the children as well as unconscious projections held by the managers. There were also found to be certain issues around terminology, such as 'planned' and 'unplanned', used in this area of work which holds particular connotations. Lastly, it was found that relationships with local authorities were significant for ensuring healthy transitions.care leaversresidential carechildren's homesengland
spellingShingle Yesha Bhagat
Barbara O'Reilly
Left behind: reflections of residential care home managers when children leave
Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
care leavers
residential care
children's homes
england
title Left behind: reflections of residential care home managers when children leave
title_full Left behind: reflections of residential care home managers when children leave
title_fullStr Left behind: reflections of residential care home managers when children leave
title_full_unstemmed Left behind: reflections of residential care home managers when children leave
title_short Left behind: reflections of residential care home managers when children leave
title_sort left behind reflections of residential care home managers when children leave
topic care leavers
residential care
children's homes
england
work_keys_str_mv AT yeshabhagat leftbehindreflectionsofresidentialcarehomemanagerswhenchildrenleave
AT barbaraoreilly leftbehindreflectionsofresidentialcarehomemanagerswhenchildrenleave