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Dive into the research topics where Lisa Bunting is active.

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Featured researches published by Lisa Bunting.


Child Care in Practice | 2004

Parenting Programmes: The Best Available Evidence

Lisa Bunting

Parenting programmes have been provided to a wide range of child and parent groups across a number of countries, but are they effective? This aim of this paper is to examine the findings from a number of systematic reviews that summarise the best available research evidence on the impact of these programmes on a range of parental and child outcomes. In addition to examining the findings from systematic reviews, the paper also takes a selective look at the uptake of parenting programmes in the United Kingdom, the evidence for effectiveness and the efficacy of adopting a population‐based approach to parent education. The findings from systematic reviews indicate that parenting programmes can have a positive impact on a range of outcomes, including improved child behaviour, increased maternal self‐esteem and relationship adjustment, improved mother–child interaction and knowledge and decreased maternal depression and stress. While there is a need for greater evaluation of the long‐term impact of these programmes, preliminary evidence indicates that these positive results are maintained over time, with group‐based, behaviourally orientated programmes tending to be more effective. While several recent trials indicate that that these programmes can be effective within the United Kingdom, high drop‐out rates may mean that they only reach a minority of parents. However, multi‐level parent education strategies such as the Australian Triple P Positive Parenting Strategy that incorporate an array of mediums aimed at different levels of need may provide an opportunity to reach a wider range of parents. This approach is currently being evaluated in order to ascertain whether it is effective in improving child outcomes in the general population. While there is no coherent strategy for parent training across the United Kingdom, within the Northern Ireland context there is a move towards the development of a family support strategy. While uptake of parent education and training is currently unknown the best available evidence highlights the positive impact that parent training can have, suggesting the importance of including parent education as one aspect of this strategy.


Psychotherapy Research | 2013

School-based counseling using systematic feedback: A cohort study evaluating outcomes and predictors of change

Mick Cooper; Dave Stewart; Jacqueline A. Sparks; Lisa Bunting

Abstract The outcomes of school-based counseling incorporating the Partners for Change Outcome Monitoring System (PCOMS) were evaluated using a cohort design, with multilevel modeling to identify predictors of change. Participants were 288 7–11 year olds experiencing social, emotional or behavioral difficulties. The intervention was associated with significant reductions in psychological distress, with a pre-post effect size (d) of 1.49 on the primary outcome measure and 88.7% clinical improvement. Greater improvements were found for disabled children, older children, and where CBT methods were used. The findings provide support for the use of systematic feedback in therapy with children.


Child & Family Social Work | 2018

Inequalities in English child protection practice under austerity: a universal challenge?

Paul Bywaters; Geraldine Brady; Lisa Bunting; Brigid Daniel; Brid Featherstone; Chantelle Jones; Kate Morris; Jonathan Scourfield; Tim Sparks; Callum Webb

The role that area deprivation, family poverty, and austerity policies play in the demand for and supply of childrens services has been a contested issue in England in recent years. These relationships have begun to be explored through the concept of inequalities in child welfare, in parallel to the established fields of inequalities in education and health. This article focuses on the relationship between economic inequality and out-of-home care and child protection interventions. The work scales up a pilot study in the West Midlands to an all-England sample, representative of English regions and different levels of deprivation at a local authority (LA) level. The analysis evidences a strong relationship between deprivation and intervention rates and large inequalities between ethnic categories. There is further evidence of the inverse intervention law (Bywaters et al., 2015): For any given level of neighbourhood deprivation, higher rates of child welfare interventions are found in LAs that are less deprived overall. These patterns are taking place in the context of cuts in spending on English childrens services between 2010–2011 and 2014–2015 that have been greatest in more deprived LAs. Implications for policy and practice to reduce such inequalities are suggested.


Journal of Child Sexual Abuse | 2014

Exploring the Influence of Reporting Delay on Criminal Justice Outcomes: Comparing Child and Adult Reporters of Childhood Sexual Abuse

Lisa Bunting

Delay between disclosure and reporting child sexual abuse is common and has significant implications for the prosecution of such offenses. While we might expect the relationship to be a linear one with longer delay reducing the likelihood of prosecution, the present study confirms a more complex interaction. Utilizing data from 2,079 police records in Northern Ireland, the study investigated the impact of reporting delay on pretrial criminal justice outcomes for child and adult reporters of child sexual abuse. While teenagers were found to be the group most disadvantaged by reporting delay, increased delay actually appeared advantageous for some groups, notably adult females reporting offenses that occurred when they were 0 to 6 years old. Conversely, adult males reporting child sexual abuse did not appear to benefit from increased delay, suggesting both an adult and gender bias within decision-making processes. The implications for future research are discussed.


Child & Family Social Work | 2018

Social work, poverty, and child welfare interventions

Kate Morris; Will Mason; Paul Bywaters; Brid Featherstone; Brigid Daniel; Geraldine Brady; Lisa Bunting; Jade Hooper; Nughmana Mirza; Jonathan Scourfield; Calum Webb

The relationship between childrens material circumstances and child abuse and neglect raises a series of questions for policy, practice, and practitioners. Children and families in poverty are significantly more likely to be the subject of state intervention. This article, based on a unique mixed-methods study of social work interventions and the influence of poverty, highlights a narrative from practitioners that argues that, as many poor families do not harm their children, it is stigmatizing to discuss a link between poverty and child abuse and neglect. The data reveal that poverty has become invisible in practice, in part justified by avoiding stigma but also because of a lack of up-to-date research knowledge and investment by some social workers in an “underclass” discourse. We argue, in light of the evidence that poverty is a contributory factor in the risk of harm, that it is vital that social work engages with the evidence and in critical reflection about intervening in the context of poverty. We identify the need for fresh approaches to the harms children and families face in order to support practices that engage confidently with the consequences of poverty and deprivation.


Journal of Social Work | 2018

Child welfare inequalities in the four nations of the UK

Paul Bywaters; Jonathan Scourfield; Chantel Jones; Tim Sparks; Martin Elliott; Jade Hooper; Claire McCartan; Marina Shapira; Lisa Bunting; Brigid Daniel

Comparative international data on patterns of inequality in child welfare interventions, for example, the proportion of children about whom there are substantiated child protection concerns or who are in out-of-home care, are far less developed than data about inequalities in health. Few countries collect reliable, comprehensive information and definitions, methods of data collection and analysis are rarely consistent. The four UK countries (England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales) provide a potential ‘natural experiment’ for comparing intervention patterns. This study reports on a large quantitative, descriptive study focusing on children in contact with children’s services on a single date in 2015. It found that children’s chances of receiving a child protection intervention were related to family socio-economic circumstances, measured by neighbourhood deprivation, within all four countries. There was a strong social gradient which was significantly steeper in some countries than others. Ethnicity was another important factor underlying inequalities. While inequalities in patterns of intervention between the four countries were considerable, they did not mirror relative levels of deprivation in the child population. Inequalities in intervention rates result from a combination of demand and supply factors. The level and extent of inequity raise profound ethical, economic and practical challenges to those involved in child protection, the wider society and the state.


Social Policy and Society | 2018

A Four-Nation comparison of kinship care in the UK: The relationship between formal kinship care and deprivation

Claire McCartan; Lisa Bunting; Paul Bywaters; Gavin Davidson; Martin Elliott; Jade Hooper

The practice of extended family and friends helping to care for children when their parents are unable to is an enduring tradition in many cultures. Kinship care provides the largest proportion of out of home care in Western society but many of these carers experience poverty and deprivation, and do not receive comparable levels of support, financial or professional, to other placement types. This study provides UK evidence for the relationship between kinship care and deprivation and examines how the welfare state frames kinship care in policy and practice.


Child & Family Social Work | 2004

Research Review: Teenage pregnancy and parenthood: the role of fathers

Lisa Bunting; Colette McAuley


Child & Family Social Work | 2004

Research Review: Teenage pregnancy and motherhood: the contribution of support

Lisa Bunting; Colette McAuley


Child Abuse Review | 2009

Information sharing and reporting systems in the UK and Ireland: Professional barriers to reporting child maltreatment concerns

Lisa Bunting; Anne Lazenbatt; Isla Wallace

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Anne Lazenbatt

Queen's University Belfast

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Claire McCartan

Queen's University Belfast

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David Hayes

Queen's University Belfast

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Gavin Davidson

Queen's University Belfast

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John Devaney

Queen's University Belfast

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Jade Hooper

University of Stirling

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