Someone will explain what is happening
Before anything else, someone will talk to you and your family to explain what Bairns' Hoose is and why you are there.
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A Bairns' Hoose is based on the Icelandic Barnahus ("children's house") model and brings justice, health, social work, and recovery services together under one roof using a "four-room" approach.
Its purpose is to provide coordinated, child-centred support for children and young people who have experienced abuse, witnessed violence, or - if under the age of criminal responsibility (currently 12) - have caused serious harm to others.
A core aim of the model is to minimise the number of times a child has to tell their story, ensuring they receive consistent, trauma-informed care throughout.
"All children in Scotland who have been victims or witnesses to abuse or violence, as well as children under the age of criminal responsibility whose behaviour has caused significant harm or abuse will have access, within one setting, to trauma-informed recovery, support and justice."
In 2022, Aberdeenshire's CPC agreed to take forward the development of an Aberdeenshire Bairns' Hoose through a collaborative, multi-agency approach. In November 2023, Aberdeenshire was confirmed as one of six successful Scottish Government Bairns' Hoose Pathfinder areas. The Pathfinder phase will run until 2027.
Pathfinder status provides access to Scottish Government funding to help redevelop a suitable building to deliver the full functions of a Bairns' Hoose.
The Bairns' Hoose has been developed in partnership with:
A key element of delivering the Bairns' Hoose is the Scottish Child Interview Model (SCIM), which went live in Aberdeenshire in November 2022 and forms an essential part of our trauma-informed practice.
Aberdeenshire delivers Bairns’ Hoose through a hub and spoke model to provide trauma-informed support while reflecting the geography of the area and the Bairns’ Hoose standards of providing choice. The hub is the Bairns’ Hoose, which has four core rooms, providing a consistent trauma-informed environment and oversight of practice. The spokes are locally based and are used for Joint Investigative Interviews, allowing children to be seen closer to home where appropriate, or through choice. or through choice. The Bairns’ Hoose spoke sites also provide children and families access to follow‑up therapeutic and recovery support to help children and families continue their healing journey.
Why choice matters: A key principle of the Bairns' Hoose approach is ensuring children feel comfortable, safe, and in control. Children have consistently told us that having a choice of location matters to them. The hub-and-spoke model was designed specifically to provide this flexibility, in line with the Bairns' Hoose Standards and national trauma-informed practice guidance.
Bairns’ Hoose is for any Child or Young Person in Aberdeenshire who is part of a child protection process following an Inter-Agency Referral Discussion (IRD). This includes children who have:
It is designed to support children who have experienced trauma, helping them access protection, health care, justice processes and recovery support in one safe, child‑friendly place
Parents, carers and non-abusing family members are an important part of the Bairns' Hoose process. Families are offered support through ARR workers, who can help answer questions, provide emotional support, and help with practical arrangements during the process.
You do not need to have all the answers. The Bairns' Hoose team is there to help you understand what is happening and what to expect at every stage.
For more information and who to contact please see the:
Bairns’ Hoose: Supporting Children, Young People and Families to Recover – A Guide for Parent’s and Carers
Professionals from Social Work, Health, Education, Police, and the Third Sector all have a role in the Bairns’ Hoose approach. Key involvement includes:
For detailed professional guidance, see the Guidance & Resources page.
We understand this is an extremely difficult time for families. The Bairns' Hoose team will:
An ARR worker will be available to support you during the process. They are not there to investigate - they are there to support your family.
Any child or young person who has been part of an Inter-Agency Referral Discussion (IRD) — whether current or historic — can be referred to the multi-agency recovery screening meeting. Referrals can be made by:
The process following referral:
For more detailed information, see the Guidance & Resources page.
If your child is involved in a child protection process and you have questions about Bairns' Hoose, please speak to your child's social worker or another professional involved in their care.
If you have concerns about a child's safety and would like to make a referral, please contact children's social work directly or see the Report a Concern page for contact details.
For more information, speak to your support worker or read the Bairns' Hoose Standards ↗.
Article 12 of the UNCRC places children’s voices at the heart of decision‑making, recognising them as active rights‑holders whose views should meaningfully influence the matters that affect their lives. Children and families’ voices have shaped our Bairns Hoose work in Aberdeenshire. Led by Children First, creative, child‑centred, and rights-based approaches have been embedded into the development of the Aberdeenshire Bairns Hoose through planned activities with groups and individuals – all of whom are our Changemakers! Children First’s participation approach is rooted in the Lundy Model of Child Participation, focusing on all four elements: Space, Voice, Audience and Influence.
Our Changemakers have directly informed the development of our Bairns’ Hoose, and our partnership has worked hard to ensure that the physical spaces, service delivery, and continued service development reflect what children and young people, and their families, have shared with us. We are committed to ongoing, sustainable, meaningful participation in Aberdeenshire. You can read more about this participation work below.
In October 2023, the Scottish Government provided funding for Aberdeenshire to take part in the Bairns' Hoose Pathfinder programme. This work supports the early testing of the Scottish Barnahus Standards and helps shape how the Bairns' Hoose model can be delivered effectively in practice.
As part of this work, the University of Edinburgh partnered with Aberdeenshire Council in January 2024 to support the implementation of the Aberdeenshire Bairns' Hoose Pathfinder. Learning from this pathfinder will help inform the future rollout of Bairns' Hoose across Scotland.
The evaluation aimed to understand how the planned changes through the Aberdeenshire Bairns' Hoose Pathfinder Partnership could improve safety, justice, recovery and recognition for children who have experienced abuse.
Between 25 November 2024 and 6 January 2025, a research survey gathered the views of professionals working in Aberdeenshire across social work, education and early years, police, health, justice and the voluntary sector. In total, 243 professionals shared their experiences. This was the first survey of its kind in Scotland to capture multidisciplinary professional perspectives before the Bairns' Hoose model is fully introduced.
In November 2025, the University of Edinburgh published Key learning for change: Aberdeenshire Bairns' Hoose programme theory. This report sets out a shared vision for Bairns' Hoose in Aberdeenshire, reflects significant progress made to date, and provides valuable learning about what is needed to turn this vision into everyday practice.
The report should be used as a reflective tool to support collective learning and future decision making, recognising that delivering this level of transformational change takes time.
Evaluation reports:
An early Pathfinder activity is to undertake a self-assessment of our current practice against the Bairns' Hoose Standards. This will be repeated at different stages of the Pathfinder phase to measure progress over time.
In addition, we have partnered with the University of Edinburgh to evaluate our delivery of the Bairns' Hoose. This builds on the work the University has undertaken with the North Strathclyde partnership, who recently opened their Bairns' Hoose in partnership with Children First.
Further information:
Bairns' Hoose Coordinator: Email
Children & Families Social Work: 01467 537111
Out of Hours Social Work (5pm–8:45pm weekdays, weekends & Bank Holidays): 03456 08 12 06
Police (Emergency): 999
Police (non-emergency): 101
Please see the Newsletters section in the professionals section > Guidance and Resources > Multi-Agency Toolkits and Resources > Newsletters for the latest information.