@WeAreNearlyThere
I understand completely what you're saying, there were multiple delays before our LO came home and the wait was horrible. However the emotional and mental toll of transition on the adults is something that is often underestimated and likewise the traumatic impact on the child. There are lots of threads on here from people struggling with the transition/ early days post placement under normal circumstances where there is no lockdown and you don't have to queue up at several shops looking for calpol because the online pharmacy can't deliver til next Wednesday, you've run out now and don't want to give any of the ibuprofen you've got because of the small risk it could be CV no matter how unlikely that it is.
Cabin fever will make everything feel a 100 times worse.
I read the advice you posted and honestly it doesn't really set out a way to minimise the risks just that a risk assessment should be done.
Transition will force you to come into with more people. If the government extends lockdown for a further short period of time you may well find that you are delayed again. No social worker wants to be the one sitting there explaining why they moved a child at this time from a safe place only for either the child, foster carer or adoptive parents to end up in hospital with this virus, especially not until it’s clear that the infection and mortality rates have passed their peak.
Are you aware of what a transition would look like for this child in normal circumstances? Generally there’s a planning meeting with everyone involved in the link/match present. This is followed by spending gradually longer periods everyday with the child until eventually you are with the child all day from getting them up in the morning to putting them to bed at night. This means that in the majority of cases rented accommodation is provided to reduce travel. Another face to face meeting takes place in the middle of the transition to check everyone is happy with it. For our LO who was 13 months at transition it took place over 10 days.
As you want transition to happen without further delays, I would recommend you be in discussions now with your SW and FC on how to reduce the time needed for transition and the risks of infection, including looking at the possibility of using technology to observe your LO’s routine at specific times rather than just as a chance to engage and connect with. You need to be asking for the specifics of the transition from the child’s social worker in order to do this. Also you need to know what the effects on transition of either SW being diagnosed with or simply being symptomatic and needing to self isolate are.
Other things that need to be discussed include how the 4 week post placement LAC review will happen and how both the child’s SW and your SW will carry out their statutory visits to your home.
I’d also recommend contacting your GP surgery to ask how you can register your LO as a new patient as that could well come up.
PS please ignore the changes in font, much of this was written throughout the day in Notes and then edited slightly on here before I posted it. We have had lockdown struggles today as a family.