VCF UK 🟪🟪🟪

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VCF UK 🟪🟪🟪

VCF UK 🟪🟪🟪

@UKVCF

The Victoria Climbié Foundation UK campaigns for children's rights to care & protection; offers legally-based advocacy support for families #everychildmatters

London, UK Beigetreten Ocak 2010
844 Folgt1.3K Follower
VCF UK 🟪🟪🟪 retweetet
CCHR United Kingdom
Psychiatrists are increasingly concerned about the risk they face in terms of accountability, particularly in the context of patient safety incidents. They are worried about being held responsible for catastrophic failings that occur under their watch, where patients can take their own lives, many of which are related to coercive prescribing habits. Psychiatrists should be worried. They aren't restoring or repairing lives. They're damaging and destroying lives. Psychiatrists, their employers, and their membership body consistently ignore the paradoxical effects of prescribed drugs, effects such as suicidal thoughts and suicidal behaviour. Instead, they blame a patient's mental difficulties for a catastrophic failure, while also lamenting a lack of public funding to carry on their "work". This modus operandi creates a smokescreen designed to deflect attention away from psychiatric failings. Psychiatry should be no different from other professions which take public and/or patient safety in the highest regard. Any attempt to exonerate psychiatrists from professional liabilities relating to patient safety should be a red flag to discerning regulatory agencies. #mentalhealth #MentalHealthAwareness #mentalhealthmatters #psychiatry #rcpsych #psychiatrist #psychiatry
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Psychreg
Psychreg@wearepsychreg·
Social Competition and Keeping Secrets Put Teenagers' Mental Health Under Strain, Research Finds psychreg.org/social-competi…
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VCF UK 🟪🟪🟪
VCF UK 🟪🟪🟪@UKVCF·
Children with additional needs are among the most vulnerable in our society. Protecting their rights, and the rights of their families to challenge decisions, must remain central to any reform. vcf-uk.org/send-why-legal… #SEND
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Together
Together@Togetherdec·
MPs "Reject" Social Media Ban - But Ministers Now Want the Power to Impose One Anyway Please don't be confused - last night, MPs may have voted against a blanket social media ban on under-16s in the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill, but: The government has NOT dropped the idea. Instead, they've proposed a new clause that would give ministers the power to introduce age restrictions on social media later - by regulation. This matters because regulations receive far less scrutiny than Acts of Parliament. MPs cannot amend them – only accept or reject them. We saw how disastrous that could be during Covid. During Covid, Health Secretary Matt Hancock used emergency regulations to shut down everyday life with a stroke of his pen – banning people from leaving home without a “reasonable excuse” and forcing thousands of businesses to close. Hancock didn’t need a new Act of Parliament to do it – just a regulation. That’s exactly the kind of power the government now wants over social media... ...and *anyone* who gets into government in future would have it, too. That’s why Parliament should not be handing ministers open-ended powers to restrict access to online platforms in the future. Once this power is granted, a future minister could set age limits or impose sweeping restrictions on online platforms with minimal debate. This is part of a wider trend of governments seeking ever broader powers over online speech and digital services, often justified in the name of protecting children. Simply handing ministers open-ended authority over who can access online platforms is not the answer. To the extent there should be major changes to how people use the internet, they must be decided openly by Parliament - not quietly imposed later through secondary legislation. The bill now returns to the House of Lords, where peers still have the opportunity to challenge these sweeping delegated powers and force MPs to reconsider. We will continue to oppose attempts to smuggle major restrictions on online access into law through the back door - and to oppose "Digital Papers Please" in general. The consultation on this issue has also just opened up (closing 26 May) and we'll say more about that soon.
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Special Needs Jungle
Special Needs Jungle@SpcialNdsJungle·
How English school policy is failing our most vulnerable children “Nearing one million suspensions in a single year reflects systemic failure“ bera.ac.uk/blog/one-milli…
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VCF UK 🟪🟪🟪@UKVCF·
"I am tired of those who think we don’t have a duty of care to everyone, whoever they are, wherever they come from, whatever they believe, whatever their skin colour, whatever their gender, whatever their age." @RichardJMurphy @UKVCF @safeguardingBME vcf-uk.org/2026-is-loadin…
Richard Murphy@RichardJMurphy

I am tired. Tired of war. Tired of anger. Tired of death. Tired of lives lost. Tired of hope destroyed. Tired of unnecessary grief. Tired of the destruction of well-being. Tired of forced migration. Tired of tears. Tired of children living in tents, denied the childhood they deserve. I am tired of the political excuses offered for war. I am tired of racial hatred. I am tired of human lust for power wrapped up in theocracy. I am tired of talk of defence that excuses aggression. I am tired of biased reporting I am tired of being told that people who have died on one side of a dispute are lives lost and that on the other, they are just killed. I am tired of a failure to recognise that any life lost unnecessarily is just that: it is a life lost unnecessarily. I am tired of the belief that war will ever solve anything. I am tired of the assumption that after war everything will go back to normal. I am tired of the cost of conflict always being borne by anyone but those who started it. I am tired of those who think we don’t have a duty of care to everyone, whoever they are, wherever they come from, whatever they believe, whatever their skin colour, whatever their gender, whatever their age. I am tired of those who think that others don’t matter. Most of all, I am tired of those who destroy hope, I live in hope. Hope of a better day. Hope of a better life for everyone. Hope that I might live to see that. Hope that everyone might then share hope. Is that too much to hope for?

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Richard Murphy
Richard Murphy@RichardJMurphy·
I am tired. Tired of war. Tired of anger. Tired of death. Tired of lives lost. Tired of hope destroyed. Tired of unnecessary grief. Tired of the destruction of well-being. Tired of forced migration. Tired of tears. Tired of children living in tents, denied the childhood they deserve. I am tired of the political excuses offered for war. I am tired of racial hatred. I am tired of human lust for power wrapped up in theocracy. I am tired of talk of defence that excuses aggression. I am tired of biased reporting I am tired of being told that people who have died on one side of a dispute are lives lost and that on the other, they are just killed. I am tired of a failure to recognise that any life lost unnecessarily is just that: it is a life lost unnecessarily. I am tired of the belief that war will ever solve anything. I am tired of the assumption that after war everything will go back to normal. I am tired of the cost of conflict always being borne by anyone but those who started it. I am tired of those who think we don’t have a duty of care to everyone, whoever they are, wherever they come from, whatever they believe, whatever their skin colour, whatever their gender, whatever their age. I am tired of those who think that others don’t matter. Most of all, I am tired of those who destroy hope, I live in hope. Hope of a better day. Hope of a better life for everyone. Hope that I might live to see that. Hope that everyone might then share hope. Is that too much to hope for?
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Educational Freedom
Educational Freedom@edfreeuk·
@stopthecwsbill sums up the questions we are all thinking about relating to the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill. The government states it is all about safeguarding but this bill does not affect many of those involved in the process.
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No More Exclusions #Free 🇵🇸
We are calling for an independent inquiry into the greatest educational scandal in British history - Black Caribbean children placed in ESN (educationally subnormal) schools in the 50s, 60s & 70s , their parents lied to. Sign the Petition! c.org/pJsM4CQwXM via @UKChange
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VCF UK 🟪🟪🟪@UKVCF·
Dangerous Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill has last-minute broad Henry VIII powers added to restrict children from the internet. Again in this Bill this is granting powers first and consulting after. And as @defenddigitalme explain, powers added at this stage is wrong.
Defend Digital Me@defenddigitalme

@dianabarran None of this should be in the Bill having already passed every scrutiny stage, expert evidence, and devolved nations’ approval. Changes should not pre-empt consultation and should not be left wide open—there is no such thing as the digital age of consent. jenpersson.com/there-is-no-su…

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Educational Freedom
Educational Freedom@edfreeuk·
“Stopping the dangerous Children’s Bill is even more vital now that the Data Use and Access legislation has been passed. This weakened data protection laws and allowed use of automated decision-making systems. Children’s rights to privacy must be protected.”
VCF UK 🟪🟪🟪@UKVCF

@Parentkind Under the 'be careful what you wish for' banner, here's another perspective you may wish to consider in light of these last minute amendments rightsforchildren.uk/dangerousbills/

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Parentkind
Parentkind@Parentkind·
On Monday MPs will have the opportunity to decisively help parents protect their children from harmful online content. They can support amendments to the Children’s Wellbeing and School Bill, which would stop social media companies delivering their content to under 16s, and would make all schools smartphone free. linkedin.com/posts/parentki…
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VCF UK 🟪🟪🟪@UKVCF·
Historically, concerns about professional shortcomings, presented as anecdotal evidence were required to be presented as research, or in data form. Now with a plethora of research available - some good, some questionable - these concerns have been shared more widely, and yet...
reann@redpepper1011

deeply emotional and important topic — when parents of disabled children experience strain not because of each other, but due to the actions or failures of professionals who should be helping them…. Raising a disabled child can bring profound love, resilience, and unity to a family — but it can also expose parents to incredible stress, especially when the systems meant to support them fall short. Too often, professionals in health, education, or social care inadvertently (or sometimes deliberately) pit parents against each other. What begins as minor miscommunication can grow into division, mistrust, and eventually, the breakdown of a relationship. When one parent is believed over the other, or when professionals share information selectively, it can create a feeling of isolation and doubt. Some parents describe being “played off” — told conflicting things, or subtly encouraged to see their partner as unreasonable or obstructive. Over time, this dynamic erodes mutual trust. Instead of coming together to fight for their child’s needs, the parents are left fighting each other. Failures in professional conduct — such as withholding assessments, dismissing concerns, or favouring one parent’s narrative — can feel like institutional bullying. Parents under extreme pressure might begin to question not only themselves but also their bond as a couple. The home, which should be a safe space for healing and unity, becomes another battleground affected by decisions made in meeting rooms. Bullying by professionals may take subtle forms: using intimidating language, minimising a parent’s viewpoint, or insisting “you’re overreacting.” These behaviours can leave lasting emotional scars and can worsen already fragile relationships. Ultimately, what should be a coordinated support system becomes a source of trauma that outlives the professional involvement itself. True professional support requires empathy, transparency, and respect for both parents’ voices. Families thrive when practitioners work collaboratively — not by deciding who’s “right,” but by honouring parents as the experts in their child’s life. When that partnership breaks down, the child’s wellbeing suffers most. Healing begins when professionals take accountability for biases and rebuild trust through honest, consistent, and inclusive communication.

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VCF UK 🟪🟪🟪@UKVCF·
Misleading or inaccurate data has long been at the core of poor practice. SWs using AI may produce the same but faster spurious reports relating to children's records under management instruction Accountability is a system wide issue and long overdue... communitycare.co.uk/content/news/s…
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