| 6 |
Chapter
6
Safeguarding Vulnerable Adults |
6.1 Lord Nolan’s
review had neither the remit nor the expertise to consider the
safeguarding of vulnerable adults. Nevertheless, aware that
a number of comparable organisations have a single set of arrangements
to cover children, young people and vulnerable adults, its response
to calls for its work to be extended into this area was to commend
the Church to consider the need for a similar set of uniform
arrangements. It also noted “that many of the systems
we recommend (for child protection) may be capable of extension
to cover vulnerable adults as well”.35
6.2 As a result, COPCA was established as
the Catholic Office for the Protection of Children and Vulnerable
Adults to reflect this broader remit. However, understandably,
and as COPCA would be the first to admit, its focus of attention
over the past five years has been almost exclusively on the
protection of children. This will need to change if the Catholic
Church is not to fall behind and find itself in the same position
in relation to vulnerable adults as it did five years ago in
relation to child protection.
Recommendation 67
The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales
and the Conference of Religious should now adopt comprehensive
safeguarding policies and procedures that cover both children
and vulnerable adults.
6.3 In recent years awareness has grown as
to the true extent and consequences of harm to vulnerable adults.36
Public policy and legislation have similarly developed in response
to this increased awareness. The Department of Health in 2000
published No Secrets: Guidance on Developing and Implementing
Multi-Agency Policies and Procedures to protect Vulnerable Adults
from Abuse. In 2005 the Association of Directors of Social Services
published Safeguarding Adults: A national framework of standards
and good practice in adult protection work. In 2006 the Safeguarding
Vulnerable Groups Act was passed, bringing together safeguarding
arrangements for children and adults. All have been informed
by a number of major inquiries that have highlighted the abuse
of adults in residential care, in services for older people
and in mental health and learning disability services.
Residential and community settings
6.4 Catholic organisations and religious
orders have a long tradition of providing residential and nursing
care and many are still active in this area of work. The regulation
of these services falls to the Commission for Social Care Inspection
(England) and the Care Standards Inspectorate Wales. There are,
however, a significant number of older members of religious
orders receiving residential care and support in their own communities.
Such settings are by agreement not regulated.
Recommendation 68
The Conference of Religious, the Association of British Contemplatives
and the Union of Monastic Superiors should develop systems
for monitoring these communities and
ensuring that there is a way for people to report concerns.
6.5 Current public policy encourages support
that enables people to live in their own homes in the community
rather than in institutional care. So it is important that individuals
have access to activities and services in their local community,
and the Church has a very important role to play in ensuring
that it provides a place where all are welcomed, treated with
respect and are safe from harm.
6.6 The Church has a well-established tradition
of welcoming people, who need support, as active members of
parish communities. There is also a long-standing commitment
to maintain contact with church members who are unable, because
of illness or disability, to attend church. This includes visiting
people at home and ensuring they receive the sacraments, so
that they remain part of the community. There are many examples
of churches being actively involved in working with people who
are homeless, refugees and asylum seekers - sometimes even providing
temporary accommodation. This work is valued and an integral
part of the Church’s life and clearly founded on gospel
values. We wish to see this strengthened and supported but want
to ensure that due care is taken to secure the safety of all
those involved.
6.7 There are a number of settings in which
clergy and lay workers are in contact with adults who could
be vulnerable to abuse:
- Chaplains and visitors to hospitals, residential and nursing
homes, prisons and other establishments.
- Priests, Deacons and Eucharistic ministers visiting people
in their own homes to take communion.
- Parish volunteers and members of organisations such as
the St Vincent de Paul Society visiting people in their own
homes and organising events on church premises.
- Events including organised trips and pilgrimages, for example
to Lourdes, for disabled people.
- Vulnerable adults attending church services and church
events.
6.8 Where staff, including chaplains, and
volunteers are recruited by establishments which are already
regulated they should be checked and vetted through that establishment’s
systems. Where parish and Catholic Society workers, for example
the Vincent de Paul Society and the Legion of Mary, are involved
in any of the work listed above they should be subject to the
same level of checking and vetting through the diocesan or religious
congregation systems currently used for those working with children
Definitions
6.9 Some of those who gave evidence to the
Commission suggested that the definition of a vulnerable adult
should be widened to cover those who are temporarily vulnerable
because of circumstances such as bereavement or family breakdown.
We believe that to do so would be unhelpful, would blur boundaries
and almost certainly lead to inconsistencies of approach. Instead,
we have recommended Codes of Conduct for clergy, religious and
Church workers (see chapter 2) that would, if accompanied by
a properly functioning complaints system, be more appropriate
to deal with the concerns of those who fall outside of the Government’s
definition of vulnerable adults. Such a code would aim to support
clergy, religious and others who work or minister on behalf
of the Church in their effort to live dedicated and committed
lives and it should aim to provide positive guidelines whilst
also being clear about the need to protect against harm.
Recommendation 69
The policies and procedures adopted by the Catholic Bishops
Conference of England and Wales and the Conference of Religious
for the protection of vulnerable adults should be based on
the definition of vulnerable adults set out in the Safeguarding
Vulnerable Groups Act 2006 (see Annex H)
Vulnerable adult structures and training
6.10 We are aware that cases involving vulnerable
adults are already being dealt with by some Diocesan and Religious
Child Protection Commissions though they do so without any dedicated
structures or policies to guide them in their work. Not every
local Commission believes they are resourced with the necessary
skills and staffing complement to take on this additional and
growing responsibility and opposition to doing so has been vociferous
in some quarters. However, in our view setting up a separate
system for safeguarding vulnerable adults would be an unnecessary
duplication and wasteful of resources. It would also present
some significant challenges in terms of securing representation
from other (statutory) agencies. Though some Diocesan and Religious
Commissions will require additional members with expertise in
adult services many of the Commissions we met already have members
with suitable experience. The skills required for professional
staff in safeguarding adults and children are similar –
even more so now that we are recommending the task of full and
proper investigation and enquiry into allegations of abuse should
pass to an independent appointed investigator with the relevant
(children or vulnerable adult) investigative competencies. However,
we do appreciate the workload already undertaken by Local Parish
Representatives and Diocesan and Religious Commissions and so
it is important that the introduction of safeguarding policies
and procedures is carefully carried out with full consultation
and a thorough assessment of the impact on present structures
and volunteers. The changes should also be closely linked to
the introduction of the new Vetting and Barring scheme being
introduced by the Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups Act 2006.
6.11 As a first step we recommend that Diocesan
and Religious Child Protection Commissions become Safeguarding
Commissions and the designation of Local Child Protection Representatives,
Child Protection Officers and Co-ordinators are similarly changed.
Training and awareness raising facilitated by the new Safeguarding
Officers/Commissions and taught in the seminaries and formation
houses must also be expanded to cover vulnerable adults.
Recommendation 70
The Diocesan Child Protection Commissions and Regional Religious
Child Protection Commissions should become Safeguarding Commissions
responsible for safeguarding children and vulnerable adults.
Recommendation 71
The current training for priests and religious (both in formation
in the seminaries and as part of ongoing formation and study
days) and other workers in the church should be expanded to
include awareness of abuse of vulnerable adults – not
least because they may be a very significant source of protection
for those adults who are at risk. Commissions and seminaries,
supported by the CSAS, will be responsible for undertaking
and facilitating such training.
|
|
‘A Programme
for Action’, p. 6 |
| 36 |
Department of Health/Comic Relief
(2007) funded UK study of abuse and neglect of older people
puts the overall prevalence rate at 4.0% or some 342,000
older people subject to some form of mistreatment (this
includes incidents involving family, friends and wider acquaintances). |
|