Guidance on serious case reviews (SCRs) is to be clarified in a bid to address reluctance among local safeguarding children boards (LSCBs) to initiate them, children's minister Edward Timpson has announced.

Timpson said the government is planning “further clarification” of guidance on SCRs to help LSCBs make decisions on when to conduct them.

The statutory guidance – Working Together to Safeguard Children – will also be updated to ensure that local authorities always notify LSCBs and Ofsted of “serious incidents” involving children.

The move follows concerns flagged up by the National Panel of Independent Experts on Serious Case Reviews about decisions taken over whether or not to initiate SCRs.

Under current guidance, an SCR must be carried out by a LSCB if abuse or neglect of a child is known or suspected, and either the child has died, or the child has been “seriously harmed” and there is cause for concern as to the way in which the authority, or other relevant agencies, have worked together to safeguard them.

The panel is concerned that many LSCBs are choosing not to conduct an SCR when one would have been appropriate.

Timpson, who was speaking at the LSCB chairs annual conference in London, said: "I’m still concerned about cases where SCRs are not even being commissioned. About times when debates over semantics get in the way of finding out what went wrong.

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