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Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

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Page 1: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors

Home Visitation SummitSeptember 29-30, 2014

Page 2: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Exercise

Look at the picture of the family just given to you

Identify 5-10 strengths of this family. Be ready to share your thoughts with the group

How does this situation pertain to you as a home visitor?

Page 3: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Home Visiting Field Practice

• Can vary according to the rules of your own home visiting program.

• Runs the gamut, from focusing on play and reading only, to intervening regarding multiple family needs.

• Home Visiting is a service delivery approach, not a program in itself.

Page 4: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Who typically visits families?

• Other family members• Friends• Neighbors• Repair people• Early Intervention services• Home health care providers• How does a Home Visitor fit in?

Page 5: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

What are “Professional Boundaries?”

• Important line between a professional relationship and a friendship or other personal relationship.

• Boundaries give the Home Visitor a pathway to being objective and to make good decisions when working with families.

Page 6: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

What Creates a Struggle with Finding Your Boundaries?

• Working with families can bring up strong feelings.

• Acting on just feelings can lead to decisions that could be harmful to families.

• Building a trusting relationship with a family can feel similar to a friendship.

• You might strongly identify with a family.

Page 7: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Exercise

• Find a partner who you don’t know.• Tell the partner about an instance where you

had a problem maintaining boundaries during a home visit.

• You will report back to the larger group about what your partner has told you.

• Be attuned to cultural issues.• This means you have to be an active listener!

Page 8: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Ethics

• It is our ethnical responsibility to maintain appropriate boundaries.

• Ethics = a system of principles and perceptions about right and wrong, and the resulting philosophy that is practiced within a group, culture, or profession.

• The helping professions have to be particularly mindful about professional ethics, especially those who work in homes.

Page 9: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Home Visiting is a Professional Relationship

• Always be mindful of the services and assistance that you are supposed to provide.

• There are legal and ethical implications in what you do – this is different than a friendship.

• What else is there about the Home Visitor’s role that is different than a friendship?

Page 10: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Friend vs. Home Visitor: Availability

• A friend might take phone calls at any time of day or any day of the week, but a Home Visitor might have specific hours to receive phone calls.

• A friend might welcome a family into her own home or stop by a friend’s home to chat, but a Home Visitor has specified appointments.

Page 11: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Friend vs. Home Visitor: Concrete Aid

• Friends sometimes share belongings, but a Home Visitor might make referrals for help.

• Friends sometimes lend or give money, but a Home Visitor should make referrals for help.

• Friends might do errands for each other, but a Home Visitor must always stay within the boundaries of her job.

Page 12: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Friend vs. Home Visitor: Emotional and Social Support

• Friends seek emotional support from each other in a two-way relationship, sharing both worries and successes.

• In the home visiting relationship, the Home Visitor should never seek emotional support or social support, or any sort of practical help, from the families being served.

Page 13: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Friend vs. Home Visitor: Emotional and Social Support

• Friends become “like family” to one another, but the families that you visit should never become involved in your own life.

• On the other hand, Home Visitors can get involved in their program families’ lives, but ONLY to the extent that the program allows. This will vary by program.

Page 14: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Friend vs. Home Visitor: Emotional and Social Support

• Families might invite you to birthday parties, or other family events.

• Your response to these invitations should be guided by your program rules and your supervisor.

• Always ask yourself: “Am I thinking about what is best to support this family’s strengths, or am I reacting a certain way to support my own needs?”

Page 15: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Exercise

• Brainstorm and write down at least 5 rules that pertain to the ethical boundaries in your home visiting program.

• List “hard” boundaries that you should never cross.

• List “soft” boundaries where you might be flexible.

Page 16: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Exercise: What Do You Do?

• When a parent invites you to a birthday party?• When a parent asks you for taxi fare?• When a parent calls you at night or on the

weekend?• When a parent asks for your help regarding

her conflict with her husband?• When a parent asks you to babysit?

Page 17: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Exercise: What Do You Do?

• When you are tempted to help a program parent find work?

• When you are consistently reluctant to visit a particular family?

• When you consistently have a feeling of wanting to “rescue” a family?

• When a parent offers you food?

Page 18: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Exercise: What Do You Do?

• When you can’t stop thinking about a family during non-work time?

• When a parent makes you angry?• When a parent keeps asking for services that

are not part of your program?• When a parent responds in a confrontational or

angry way that you didn’t anticipate?• When you don’t understand something about a

family’s culture?

Page 19: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Supervision

• Supervision is a key component for all home visiting programs.

• Your supervisor should be helping you to work out your strongest feelings and there should be regular meetings to help you do so.

• Your supervisor should consistently support home visiting staff by reminding everyone about establishing and maintaining boundaries.

Page 20: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Self-Reflection

• Supervisors should consistently help you self-reflect about feelings, about the role of culture, and about what is “pushing your buttons.”

• Supervisors should ask you questions to help you self-reflect, and all Home Visitors should have the opportunity to help each other self-reflect.

Page 21: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Self-Reflection

• How do you form a relationship?• What is your definition of relationship?• Who do you have a relationship with when

home visiting?• How do you wish to present yourself?• How do your program families view you?

Page 22: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Trust

• What are techniques you use to develop trust with program families?

• Do you have to use different techniques with different families?

• Why do some families have difficulty trusting?

Page 23: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Tug of War

• You will experience the “tug of war” between building a trusting relationship with families and establishing/maintaining boundaries.

• The more you practice, the less the struggle will become.

Page 24: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Personal Safety Tips

1. Be aware of the neighborhood2. Pre-screening of home environment3. Parking & walking to & from home4. Work issued cell phone5. Having someone know your schedule

Page 25: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Personal Safety Tips

6. Build relationship with local police5. Other family members in home6. Pets7. Mace/pepper spray8. Locating exits

Page 26: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Personal Safety Tips

9. Sensing danger & leaving the situation10. Bringing a second staff if necessary11. Suspicion of or witnessing abuse or D&A12. TRUST YOUR GUT!!

Page 27: Personal Safety & Boundary Setting Tips for Home Visitors Home Visitation Summit September 29-30, 2014

Thank You!

Cathy ZiegenfussFamily Connection of EastonParent-Child Home Program

[email protected] x20018