Source · Select Committees · Public Accounts Committee

Recommendation 10

10 Acknowledged

The Care Review, while recognising the role the Innovation Programme has played in creating stronger...

Conclusion
The Care Review, while recognising the role the Innovation Programme has played in creating stronger practice, asserts that the impact of its scale and spread approach is limited in the absence of more fundamental change. The Care Review considers the evidence backing its own recommendations is already ‘compelling and comprehensive’, while the evaluations from the Department’s successor schemes are only due between Autumn 2022 and 2027.28 The Department is having to balance the tensions between the time taken to learn about outcomes from its longer-term evaluations and the desire in the sector for early action.29 The Department considers that it is moving towards the point of transitioning from scale and spread into changing mainstream approaches of social care practice in order to influence impacts on a greater scale.30 21 Q 52 22 C&AG’s report, paras 9, 18, 2.2 and 3.1 23 Q 56 24 EPC0003 p.2 25 EPC0001 p.1 26 Qq 54, 57 27 Qq 44, 53 28 Josh MacAlister, The Independent Review of Children’s Social Care Final Report, May 2022 p.46, and C&AG’s Report para 20 29 Q 14 30 Qq 72–73 Evaluating innovation projects in children’s social care 11 2 Supporting the system for improving children’s social care Improving data in children’s social care
Government Response Summary
The National Framework has been produced with the support of the department’s National Practice Group and informed by the Innovation Programme and Care Review. The National Framework will embed the use of evidence and learning across local authorities.
Government Response Acknowledged
HM Government Acknowledged
2.4 The National Framework has been produced with the support of the department’s National Practice Group, made up of experts in practice, evidence, lived experience and multi- agency working. Findings from the department’s investment in children’s social care, including in the Innovation Programme, along with outcomes suggested by the Care Review, informed the outcomes and expectations for practice described in the National Framework. The National Framework will embed the use of evidence and learning across local authorities, helping to raise the quality of practice and deliver better help, protection and care to children and families. Following consultation, the department plans, in time, that the National Framework is issued as statutory guidance.