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Who Do You Think You Are?-style service to help young care leavers reconnect with their ‘tribe’
Care leavers often lose touch with people in their life and the new service aims to help them find and rebuild relationships. Photograph: Graeme Robertson/The Guardian View image in fullscreen Care leavers often lose touch with people in their life and the new service aims to help them find and rebuild relationships. Photograph: Graeme Robertson/The Guardian Who Do You Think You Are?-style service to help young care leavers reconnect with their ‘tribe’ Scheme aims to help 18-year-olds in England who lack support after leaving system to find trusted people with whom they have lost touch Growing up and leaving the care system is daunting enough, but for 22-year-old Hannah, from Hertfordshire, the biggest anxiety was the sudden reality of no longer having a crowd in her corner. Turning 18 as a care leaver in England has been described as a “cliff edge” at which young people lose access to their social worker and support staff who provide day-to-day advocacy and help in a crisis – a reassuring and constant adult presence. While in care, Hannah had lost touch with people from her old life. Then she used a family-finding service for care leavers to reconnect with an auntie and some friends from school, whom she hadn’t seen in years. “It’s really nice to have more of a trusted network now. We as young people need this. We need this to make true connections and find our value,” she said. “We’ve seen the number of deaths from care leavers and a lot of that is because people don’t have a support network around them. This has helped me reconnect with my inner child, to remember a time when I didn’t have as many worries.” On Thursday, the government announced it would be launching a national Who Do You Think You Are?-style service for care leavers, with £8.4m of funding, to help them find family and friends they lost touch with while living in care. A specially trained coordinator will work with a young person to identify important people in their life and safely locate them using social care records, old school reports and public birth and marriage registries, before reuniting them with a support plan in place. In 2024, one in 10 children in care moved homes three or more times in a year, and more than one in five were living more than 20 miles from their home community, making isolation and lost relationships common. The government said the new family-finding system would “make enduring relationships a central priority of the care system for the first time”. “Too much of the care system breaks rather than builds relationships,” said Josh MacAlister, the children’s minister. He added: “The anxiety of professionals around children and young people means we’ll make short-term decisions that rupture relationships in order to create safety for a short period of time. But that very act is the thing that means, long-term, the young person is at risk because they don’t have a tribe, they’ve lost those connections. “That ultimately leads to the shockingly high rate