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We provide advice to parents, grandparents, relatives, friends and kinship carers who are involved with children’s services in England or need their help. We can help you understand processes and options when social workers or courts are making decisions about your child’s welfare.
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To speak to an adviser, please call our free and confidential advice line 0808 801 0366 (Monday to Friday 9.30am to 3pm, excluding Bank Holidays). Or you can ask us a question via email using our advice enquiry form.
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An evaluation of the trial commissioned by Family Rights Group (FRG), has been published by CELCIS, the Centre for Excellence for Children’s Care and Protection, today (26 September) which highlights the learning, challenges, and opportunities of this innovative approach for children, young people, their carers, families and people who are important to them.
Lifelong Links supports children and young people who are in care by identifying and contacting relatives and other adults to create or develop connections. The programme, supported by the child’s local authority, works to ensure that these relationships can continue to grow. The work can also include helping young people to find out more about their background and history, including through generating family trees, and can help to build their understanding and identity of who they are.
“In this evaluation of the Lifelong Links Trial in Scotland, we heard directly from young people, their carers, and practitioners about the profound impact that connecting and reconnecting to family members or other adults important to the young person has had on their sense of identity, their confidence, and their wellbeing. This speaks directly to one of the key foundations of The Promise by the Independent Care Review, for children in care to be supported to develop relationships, and we cannot underestimate the lifelong effects that this will have.”
“Too often the care system breaks rather than builds relationships for children, including with their family and friends. Yet we all need people who are there for us, to celebrate good news and to support us when things are tougher. Lifelong Links was designed to do just that, and the evidence is that it is transforming lives.
“This new research by CELCIS adds further evidence to the case for Lifelong Links to be an offer to every care experienced child and young person in every part of the UK.
“Lifelong Links is increasing the number of people that children in care can turn to, improving their mental health and sense of identity, and giving them greater agency over their lives. Outcomes which are all fundamental to Scotland’s Promise to its young people.
“We invite the Scottish Government and local authorities to work with us to make Lifelong Links a universal offer to care experienced children and young people.”
All three local authorities are committed to continuing to deliver the support and benefits of Lifelong Links for children and young people in their area.
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