What Is a Care Plan?
At Welcare, these standards aren’t just targets, they are a philosophy of care. They guide how we recruit, train, plan, and support every child in our homes.
It includes:
- Placement type and purpose
- Health, emotional, and behavioural needs
- Education arrangements and goals
- Contact with family and significant others
- Identity, culture, and religion
- Long-term plans and transition goals
- Roles and responsibilities of involved professionals
Care Plans are reviewed regularly and updated in line with the child’s Looked-After Child (LAC) reviews.
Key Components Relevant to Residential Staff
An overview of each care plan section and the role of the children’s home in meeting children’s needs.
Placement Details
Understand the placement purpose (e.g. short-term, long-term, step-down)
Health and Wellbeing
Support daily routines, mental health plans, and therapy access
Education
Liaise with Virtual Schools and implement Personal Education Plans (PEPs)
Contact Arrangements
Supervise, facilitate, or record contact sessions as directed
Emotional and Behavioural Needs
Adapt strategies using trauma-informed models and key work
Pathway Planning (age 16+)
Support independence skills, budgeting, and leaving care prep
Legal and Statutory Framework
- Complete the Care Plan before placement (except in emergencies)
- Review it within 20 working days, then at 3 months, then every 6 months
- Involve the child and relevant professionals (including key workers)
- Ensure it reflects the child’s voice and evolving needs
Best Practice for Residential Staff
- Read the full Care Plan upon admission — not just the referral
- Clarify who holds Parental Responsibility (PR) and who makes key decisions
- Track progress toward Care Plan goals in keywork notes and incident reports
- Ensure emotional, educational, and health needs are being met as agreed
- Escalate if the Care Plan becomes outdated or unrealistic
A well-implemented Care Plan should guide everything from bedtime routines to decisions about school transitions and sibling contact.
Why This Matters
Children in care deserve stability, clarity, and a team that understands the bigger picture. For professionals in residential homes, engaging with the Care Plan isn’t optional — it’s how we protect children’s rights, meet inspection standards, and deliver effective, therapeutic support.
At Welcare, our staff are trained to align daily care with the child’s legal plan — not only for compliance, but because it works.
Further Reading
Government Guidance
- Care Planning, Placement and Case Review Regulations – GOV.UK

