Worth 30%
Please study the case study below and conduct arisk assessment as per the Adult Screening Tool found on Moodle under Assessment 3.
All professionals working with victim survivors should use the Screening and Identification Tool, either applied routinely when this is a part of your professional role or service, or when indicators of family violence are identified.
Screening is not an activity that occurs only once by a single professional or within a service. In service settings where a person has multiple contacts, it is necessary to screen over time and at each contact to ensure any changes in the relationship or use of violence is identified.
Adult Screening Tool
In addition to the screening tool, students are required to submit an accompanying Word document (with an Assessment Cover Sheet), responding to the following questions about the case study. Responses should be 750 words in total. (Please use references correctly when answering the questions below)
Questions:
1. What forms of domestic/family violence has David used against Celina?
2. How has having no financial control affected Celina?
3. What might a community service worker in the domestic/family violence area want to consider when working with Celina to ensure that Celina and also her mother are provided with safe, sensitive and effective support?
CASE STUDY
Celina
and David grew up in the same country of origin, however, at the time they met
through an online dating website, David had been living in Australia for 7
years, and Celina was still living in her home country with her mother. Both
Celina and David have been married previously, are professionally qualified and
aged in their thirties. David has a primary-school age child who lives with his
former wife and spends regular weekend and holiday time with David. After
Celina and David married overseas, David promptly returned to Australia and
Celina applied to Australian Immigration for a joint visa with David as the
sponsor. When the visa was granted, Celina resigned from her professional
employment and travelled to Australia to live with David.
Celina
speaks fondly of her early days living with David. She described him as
gentlemanly, respectful, loving and enthusiastic about showing her the sights
of the exciting city she had moved to. Celina had experienced stigma in her own
culture due to being a divorced woman and felt that her marriage to David
restored her dreams for a good life and a family. She was committed to
supporting David in caring for his child, and believes she made a genuine
effort to build a relationship. When the child was staying with Celina and
David, Celina would take care of the child’s needs, prepare meals and do the
housekeeping while David went to work. This was not a lifestyle Celina was
accustomed to having been employed and independent for many years. Celina was
unable to get employment while on a temporary visa and was therefore entirely
financially dependent on David.
One
evening, around a month after Celina arrived in Australia, David’s behaviour
towards her changed abruptly. It was the child’s birthday and they had planned
to collect the child from the mother’s house and go out for dinner. Celina had
prepared and wrapped presents. David refused to allow Celina to travel in the
car on the basis that it would upset the child’s mother. Instead, she was
dropped somewhere close to a big junction on the way and was pushed out of the
car by force. In the middle of an unfamiliar area, she walked down the street
and stopped at a supermarket and decided to wait there as it was getting dark
and she didn’t know where else to go being still new to Australia. She was left
for several hours until David eventually collected her. Celina found herself
highly distressed, at night in unfamiliar surrounds, and confused and hurt by
David’s inconsiderate treatment. Not knowing what to do, she rang his parents
and her own mother (all living overseas) seeking their advice and comfort. She
pleaded with David’s father to contact David and ask him to collect her.
David’s mother told her that David had a bad temper, but he couldn’t afford to
have another marriage fail. Celina’s mother advised that she must try hard to
make the marriage work. When David collected Celina later that evening, he
shouted abuse at her, claiming that she was trouble and had ruined the child’s
birthday, and that he didn’t want a woman who wouldn’t obey him. Once home,
David left Celina in the car crying for half an hour then returned and grabbed
and shook her violently. Considerably smaller than David, Celina felt scared
and weak and asked him to stop; he then dragged her out of the car and pushed
her away. Celina fell and hit her head on the concrete driveway resulting in a
painful bump to her head and wounded right foot. David dragged her into the
house where she laid crying and shaking on the floor while he had a meal.
Seemingly to revive her, David began slapping Celina repeatedly on both cheeks,
and then tossed a bucket of water over her face. Some hours later, Celina
managed to get to her feet and make her way to their bed. In the days
following, David apologised to Celina, but remained angry about her contacting
the parents and sharing details of their marriage, which he believed should
remain private.
Over
time, David demanded that Celina take on more and more of the household duties
and child caring responsibilities. David began scolding and verbally abusing
Celina in the presence of the child. Celina was not allowed a phone of her own;
instead, David would give her his personal mobile while he was at work and he
would use his office mobile to call her incessantly through the day,
principally to tell her what he wanted done and to get details of the meals and
snacks she was preparing for the child. When David returned home, he would
check the activity and search history on his personal mobile and inspect the
food in the fridge and cupboards. So demeaned by this suspicious conduct,
Celina decided to document meals and activities through the day by taking
digital photographs and loading them on David’s Dropbox so he could inspect and
verify them. David only ever gave Celina small amounts of cash to cover public
transport costs to and from the child’s school; otherwise, she had no access to
any funds. He also accused her of secreting spare coins for her own use. They
argued daily about David’s demands and Celina’s resistance to comply. David
would often skype his parents and complain to them about Celina being a bad
wife, aware that Celina was listening.
Not
long after the incident on the child’s birthday, David argued with Celina and,
in full view of the child, tried to strangle her. Celina called the police but
upon their arrival minimised what had occurred, not telling the police what had
actually taken place.
Celina’s
mother decided to visit her daughter in Australia and travelled to Australia
with David after he had been on a brief visit to their home country. They were
to live together in the same house, and Celina’s mother was to share the
child’s bedroom. David however insisted that the child sleep between him and Celina
while the mother stayed in the other room. Celina tried to talk with David
about alternative and more comfortable sleeping arrangements, but he wasn’t
amenable. One night, Celina was left with so little room in the bed that she
fell out and injured herself. David handed her over to her mother and went back
to sleep. Celina and her mother were forced to sleep together in a very small
bed. Thereafter, they spent most nights on the couches in the living room. The
marital relationship soured, and sexual relations ceased, yet Celina continued
to make an effort to look after David’s child and keep the household going
despite suffering diarrhoea, headaches, muscle and back pain, and feelings of
stress and depression.
Another
evening (in the presence of Celina and her mother), David skyped his parents,
again complaining about Celina. During the conversation, Celina tried to
correct David’s claims and explain her experience of his behaviour. David
called her (in their first language) a prostitute and accused her of having sex
with her mother because they slept together. He then wielded a coffee cup as if
to throw it at her when Celina’s mother physically intervened. Later, as he
became increasingly intoxicated, he told them both to leave the house before he
turned into an animal; he said he would refuse them food and drinks and get rid
of them if they caused trouble. He threatened to separate them and send
Celina’s mother back to her home country. When David was asleep, Celina went to
a neighbour as she was scared, the neighbour urged Celina to contact the
police, however, Celine resisted. Upon returning to the home, David woke and
destroyed the wedding photographs hung on the wall by smashing them in front of
Celina. Celina and her mother were left totally helpless. At this point, Celina
& her mother both went to the neighbour & the neighbour called the
police.
The
police initiated a protection order application on Celine’s behalf and, at the
first mention date, secured a temporary protection order. The police referred
Celina to a family violence service provider so as her risk could be assessed
& for further assistance such as legal & financial advice after having
removed David from the home.
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Criteria for essay/case study |
Weight 100% |
Areas to be covered |
HD |
D |
C |
P |
F |
Academic writing |
40% |
§ Questions answered & considered& answered within the
parametres outlined § Citations use as required accurately |
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Accurate & complete completion
of the Adult Risk Assessment & Screening tool |
60% |
§ Persuasive and sound § All areas completed with considered responses § Risk category & factors reflected in Risk Assessment Tool |
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Criteria for Essay |
High Distinction 80% - 100 % |
Distinction 70%- 79% |
Credit 60-69% |
Pass 50-59% |
Fail <50% |
Academic Writing |
Demonstrates very clear and good
understanding of the subject, very well effective use of outside sources,
clear and concise in text citations and referencing. |
Demonstrates clear and good
understanding of the subject, effective use of outside sources, clear and
concise in text citations and referencing. |
Demonstrates well understanding of
the subject, effective use of outside sources, clear and concise in text
citations and referencing. |
Demonstrates adequate understanding
of the subject, use of outside sources, and in text citations and
referencing. |
Demonstrates poorly the
understanding of the subject, effective use of outside sources, unclear and
omitting in text citations and referencing. |
Accurate & complete completion of the Adult Risk Assessment
& Screening tool |
Completely accurate & adequate
completion of Adult Risk & Assessment & Screening considering all
areas in the Tool |
Mostly accurate & adequate
completion of Adult Risk & Assessment & Screening considering most
areas in the Tool |
Mostly accurate completion of Adult
Risk & Assessment & Screening considering many areas in the Tool |
Adequate completion of Adult Risk
& Assessment & Screening with some consideration of areas in the Tool |
Poor completion of Adult Risk &
Assessment & Screening with little to no consideration of areas in the
Tool |
RISK ASSESSMENT TOOL
Victim Survivor Details
|
|
Full Name: |
Alias: |
Date of Birth: |
Also known as: |
Gender: ☐Woman/Girl ☐
Man/Boy ☐ Self-described (please specify) ☐Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
Intersex: ☐ Yes☐ No ☐Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
Transgender: ☐ Yes☐ No ☐ Client preferred
not to say ☐ Unknown |
Sexuality: ☐ Same sex/gender attracted ☐ Heterosexual/other gender attracted ☐Multi-gender attracted ☐ Asexual ☐ None
of the above ☐ Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
Primary address: |
Current Location: |
Contact number: |
Comments: |
Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander ☐Aboriginal
☐Torres
Strait Islander ☐Both
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander |
CALD☐
Yes ☐ No
☐
Not known LGBTIQ☐
Yes☐ No
☐
Not known People
with disabilities☐ Yes ☐ No ☐ Not known
Rural☐
Yes ☐ No
☐
Not known |
Was an interpreter used during
this assessment? |
☐Yes ☐No (If yes, what language): |
Country of birth: |
Year of arrival in Australia: |
Bridging or Temporary Visa? |
☐Yes ☐No (If yes, what type): |
Language mainly spoken at home: |
Service provider client ID: |
Emergency contact: Relationship to victim survivor: |
Name: Contact Number: |
Perpetrator Details |
|
Full Name: |
Alias: |
Date of Birth: |
Also known as: |
Gender: ☐Woman/Girl ☐
Man/Boy ☐ Self-described (please specify) ☐Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
Intersex: ☐ Yes☐ No ☐Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
Transgender: ☐ Yes☐ No ☐ Client preferred
not to say ☐ Unknown |
Sexuality: ☐ Same sex/gender attracted ☐ Heterosexual/other gender attracted ☐Multi-gender attracted ☐ Asexual ☐ None
of the above ☐ Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
Primary address: |
Current Location: |
Relationship to
victim survivor: |
Service provider client ID: |
Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander ☐Aboriginal
☐Torres
Strait Islander ☐Both
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander |
CALD☐
Yes ☐ No
☐
Not known LGBTIQ☐
Yes☐ No
☐
Not known People
with disabilities☐ Yes ☐ No ☐ Not known
Rural☐
Yes ☐ No
☐
Not known |
Further
details |
|
PLEASE
COMPLETE FURTHER DETAILS HERE |
|
|||
Full
Name: |
Alias: |
||
Date
of Birth: |
Also
known as: |
||
Gender: ☐Woman/Girl ☐ Man/Boy ☐ Self-described (please specify) ☐Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
Intersex: ☐ Yes☐ No ☐Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
||
Transgender: ☐ Yes☐ No ☐ Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
Sexuality: ☐ Same sex/gender attracted ☐ Heterosexual/other gender attracted ☐Multi-gender attracted ☐ Asexual ☐ None of the above ☐ Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
||
Primary
address: |
Current
Location: |
||
Contact
number: |
Comments: |
||
Relationship
to victim survivor: |
Relationship
to perpetrator: |
||
Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait
Islander ☐Aboriginal
☐Torres
Strait Islander ☐Both
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander |
CALD☐
Yes ☐ No
☐
Not known LGBTIQ☐
Yes☐ No
☐
Not known People with disabilities☐
Yes ☐ No
☐
Not known Rural☐
Yes ☐ No
☐
Not known |
||
Child 2 Details# |
|
||
Full Name: |
Alias: |
||
Date of Birth: |
Also known as: |
||
Gender: ☐Woman/Girl ☐ Man/Boy ☐ Self-described (please specify) ☐Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
Intersex: ☐ Yes☐ No ☐Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
||
Transgender: ☐ Yes☐ No ☐ Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
Sexuality: ☐ Same sex/gender attracted ☐ Heterosexual/other gender attracted ☐Multi-gender attracted ☐ Asexual ☐ None of the above ☐ Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
||
Primary address: |
Current Location: |
||
Contact number: |
Comments: |
||
Relationship to victim survivor: |
Relationship to perpetrator: |
||
Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait
Islander ☐Aboriginal
☐Torres
Strait Islander ☐Both Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander |
CALD☐
Yes ☐ No
☐
Not known LGBTIQ☐
Yes☐ No
☐
Not known People with disabilities☐
Yes ☐ No
☐
Not known Rural☐
Yes ☐ No
☐
Not known |
||
Child 3 Details# |
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||
Full
Name: |
Alias: |
||
Date
of Birth: |
Also
known as: |
||
Gender: ☐Woman/Girl ☐ Man/Boy ☐ Self-described (please specify) ☐Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
Intersex: ☐ Yes☐ No ☐Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
||
Transgender: ☐ Yes☐ No ☐ Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
Sexuality: ☐ Same sex/gender attracted ☐ Heterosexual/other gender attracted ☐Multi-gender attracted ☐ Asexual ☐ None of the above ☐ Client preferred not to say ☐ Unknown |
||
Primary
address: |
Current
Location: |
||
Contact
number: |
Comments: |
||
Relationship
to victim survivor: |
Relationship
to perpetrator: |
||
Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait
Islander ☐Aboriginal
☐Torres
Strait Islander ☐Both
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander |
CALD☐
Yes ☐ No
☐
Not known LGBTIQ☐
Yes☐ No
☐
Not known People with disabilities☐
Yes ☐ No
☐
Not known Rural☐
Yes ☐ No
☐
Not known |
||
Question |
Yes |
No |
Comments (or not known) |
||
Has anyone
in your family done something that made you or your children feel unsafe or
afraid? |
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Is there more
than one person in your family that is making you or your children feel
unsafe or afraid? (Are there multiple perpetrators) |
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The following risk
related questions refer to the perpetrator: |
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Perpetrator
actions |
Have they… |
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controlled your day-to-day activities (e.g. who you see, where you go)
or put you down?* |
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threatened to hurt you in any way? |
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physically hurt you in any way (hit, slapped, kicked or otherwise
physically hurt you)? |
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SELF-ASSESSMENT |
Do you have any immediate concerns about the
safety of your children or someone else in your family? |
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Do you feel safe when you leave here today? |
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Would you engage with a trusted person or police if you felt unsafe or
in danger? (Note: if lack of trust in police is identified risk management must
address this) |
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Further details |
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NEEDS AND SAFETY |
|||||
Needs assessment (Please complete) |
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https://www.vic.gov.au/maram-practice-guides-and-resources
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