Passive Intervention and Prevention Strategies (PIPS)
The aim of Passive Intervention and Prevention (PIPS) training is to:
- enable schools and other settings to develop a consistent, acceptable team approach to managing behaviour in a manner that maintains positive relationships and continues to care for pupils/clients at times of crisis
- provide a process of repair and reflection for staff and children
- increase staff awareness concerning the importance of recording and reporting, monitoring and evaluating, all incidents involving positive handling
Expected Outcomes:
- experience and practice the skills of guiding, safe touch and holding
- explore how these acts of care combine with calming, diffusing and problem solving strategies
- experience passive intervention strategies designed to follow rather than force movement
- identify key elements for developing a consistent team approach to managing challenge
- increase awareness of the importance of recording and reporting, monitoring and evaluating
- develop an increased sense of confidence at times of crisis
The decision to intervene physically or not will always be a professional judgement based on on-going risk assessment. The skills are designed to reduce risk to both staff and pupils should it be decided that, everything else having failed, a physical intervention is the safest option.