Teen death report reveals ‘unacceptable’ gaps in support

Social services failed to intervene properly despite evidence Danny Talbot was abused

Danny Talbot’s aunts Donna (left) and Deborah Lamb in Dublin yesterday. Every week the sisters come to Dublin’s Liffey boardwalk in search of vulnerable young people to help. Photograph: Dara Mac Dónaill/The Irish Times
Danny Talbot’s aunts Donna (left) and Deborah Lamb in Dublin yesterday. Every week the sisters come to Dublin’s Liffey boardwalk in search of vulnerable young people to help. Photograph: Dara Mac Dónaill/The Irish Times

A damning report into the death of a teenager who spent most of his life in State care reveals a series of missed opportunities by social services to respond to evidence of abuse and neglect.

The independent report – to be published by the Child and Family Agency later today – shows critical gaps in mental health services, poor frontline social work practice and a failure to recognise the risks facing 19-year-old Danny Talbot.

He died of an apparent drugs overdose while still in aftercare services provided by the State.

“This case demonstrates the folly of assuming children are safe merely because they are formally in the care system,” it states.

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It is one of five cases of deaths or serious incidents involving children in care due to be published later today.

It comes at a time of rising concern over the level of funding available for child protection services and staffing gaps in frontline services.

Staff shortfall

Latest available figures indicate there are about 200 vacancies in social work teams, while there are still hundreds of children without allocated social workers or care plans.

The report by the National Review Panel into the death of Mr Talbot is likely to place renewed focus on gaps in care.

It calls on the Child and Family Agency to ensure there is effective management and accountability regarding all children in care.

Among its findings are that there was an inadequate response to evidence that the deceased was experiencing abuse and neglect as a young child.

His needs were never fully assessed at any time throughout his life as his behaviour deteriorated, while there was little appreciation of the fact that he was at risk of significant harm in the care of the State.

In fact, the decision by social services to repeatedly place him in the “out of hours” service – or emergency hostels for homeless young people – exposed him to even further risk.

Carl O'Brien

Carl O'Brien

Carl O'Brien is Education Editor of The Irish Times. He was previously chief reporter and social affairs correspondent