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Home » Children not always recognised as domestic abuse victims in their own right, inspectorates warn
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Children not always recognised as domestic abuse victims in their own right, inspectorates warn

By uk-times.com21 January 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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Children not always recognised as domestic abuse victims in their own right, inspectorates warn
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  • Inspectorates call for urgent improvements to ensure children at risk of, or victims of domestic abuse, are better protected and supported.
  • Ofsted, the Care Quality Commission (CQC), His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS), and His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Probation (HMIP) concerned by inconsistencies in how local agencies and partnerships identify and support children affected by domestic abuse.
  • Children often overlooked as victims of domestic abuse by the police, social care and health services, despite introduction of the Domestic Abuse Act in 2021.

The 4 inspectorates jointly carried out inspections across 6 local authority areas to look at the response to children who are at risk from, or are victims of, domestic abuse. Inspectors considered support provided across local partnerships and services, including children’s social care, health services, police, youth justice services and schools.

Today’s report follows on from a joint targeted area inspection (JTAI) carried out in 2017 on the multi-agency response to children living with domestic abuse. The Domestic Abuse Act 2021 recognises children as victims of domestic abuse if they have seen, heard or experienced the effect of the abuse. But today’s report finds that practice across police, health and social care services in some local areas remains focused on adults’ needs and risks, and is insufficiently focused on the needs and risks of children.

The report also warns of significant variation in how well children’s experiences are captured and how clearly the risk posed by perpetrators of domestic abuse is understood and managed by children’s services, police and probation services. In some local areas, there is insufficient training for professionals, such as the police and social workers, on domestic abuse and its impact on children, and the understanding of coercive control is particularly limited. This means children do not always get the right help and protection at the right time.

Information held by different agencies about children, adult victims and perpetrators is not always systematically shared or drawn together by the network of professionals involved with children. Concerningly, this limits professionals’ ability to form a complete picture of the risks posed to children.

The inspectorates also found examples of excellent practice in some local areas and by individual practitioners. The report highlights strong practice in relation to unborn babies, with midwives demonstrating professional curiosity, awareness and knowledge of the potential risk of domestic abuse. Schools and early years providers were also found to play a critical role in supporting and protecting children.

The report states that the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill, with its increased focus on early help, stronger multi-agency responses to child protection, and better information sharing across agencies, is an opportunity to make systemic improvements to protect children.

Yvette Stanley, Ofsted’s national director for children’s social care

It’s shocking that 1 in 7 children in the UK will have lived with domestic abuse at some stage in their lives. Protecting and supporting children at risk of domestic abuse needs to be viewed as a priority for society and for all services who work with children.

Although we saw some positive work to support children affected by domestic abuse, it is worrying that we did not find more consistent improvements since our last JTAI. There must be a greater focus on recognising children as victims in their own right, and urgent improvements need to be made so that local agencies and partnerships can better support children affected by this type of abuse.

Lucy Harte, Deputy Director of Multiagency Operations for Primary and Community Care at CQC

This report highlights that, despite being established in law, children affected by domestic abuse are not being consistently recognised or supported as victims. The wide variation in how local agencies identify risk, share information, and respond to children’s needs, unfortunately leave some children without the protection and help they require.

The examples of good practice in the report show that stronger strategic multi-agency working, information sharing and clear governance mean that children at risk are more likely to receive effective early intervention and safeguarding.

Michelle Skeer, His Majesty’s Inspector of Constabulary

Domestic abuse can devastate the lives of children, and it is vital that they are recognised as victims in their own right. An effective multi-agency response is essential to keep children safe.

While we found a clear commitment and dedicated work by many frontline officers and staff, children’s experiences were not always captured or reflected in police reports or safeguarding referrals.

And it was disappointing to find inconsistencies in how well the risk posed to children by domestic abuse perpetrators is understood and managed, as well as gaps in how police actions are shared with partner agencies such as children’s social care and schools. This undermines collective safeguarding efforts.

Protecting children must remain a priority, and through our inspections, we will continue to monitor progress and support improvements in this important area.

Martin Jones, Chief Inspector of Probation

Throughout these inspections we were pleased to recognise some good probation partnership practice, however, there is still much to do. We found the probation service’s contribution to the multi-agency approach is variable, and that insufficient coordination was leaving children without effective protection. The findings show the probation service is not consistently realistic about what can be – and is being – delivered, and more attention must be paid to the risks posed to children in order to avoid safeguarding opportunities being missed.

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