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Professor John Robertson OBA
BBC UK has the above headline story with:
The main screening tool used to decide which domestic abuse victims get urgent support “doesn’t work”, Safeguarding Minister Jess Phillips has admitted to the BBC.
Police, social services and healthcare workers across the UK have largely relied on the Dash questionnaire to assess risk since 2009.
But there are now mounting concerns from academics and those working in the sector that the checklist does not correctly identify victims at the highest risk of further harm.
BBC Scotland have nothing equivalent. Their silence is revealing.
Here’s why:
Domestic abuse is TWICE as common in England and Wales as in Scotland
From the Scottish Government’s Safer Communities Directorate today, the above graph and:
The police recorded 63,867 incidents of domestic abuse in 2023-24, an increase of 3% compared to the previous year. This is the first year this figure has shown an increase since 2020-21.1
Note, from Section 1.2 of the full report:
The Act [in 2018] did not alter the way in which statistics on the volume of domestic abuse incidents reported to the police are collected and produced. As such its impact on this data is likely to be limited, albeit the associated awareness campaign to raise public understanding of domestic abuse, and to encourage victims to seek support may have had a role in the increased number of incidents seen during the years following the introduction of the act.
All things being equal, to take account of the 11 times greater population, we might expect the figure for England and Wales to be 11 times higher, that is around 700 000, but it was in fact, for 2022-23 (latest available) 1.45 million2, TWICE as high.
No doubt some will say this is pointless whitabootery but imagine that it was the other way round and domestic abuse incidents were twice as common in Scotland – ‘Scotland domestic abuse capital of UK!‘
Sources:
- https://www.gov.scot/publications/domestic-abuse-statistics-recorded-police-scotland-2023-24/pages/incidents-of-domestic-abuse/
- https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/crimeandjustice/articles/domesticabuseprevalenceandtrendsenglandandwales/yearendingmarch2023#:~:text=%5Bnote%201%5D.-,The%20police%20recorded%201%2C453%2C867%20domestic%20abuse%2Drelated%20incidents%20and%20crimes,1%2C347%2C536)%20%5Bnote%203%5D.
Not only that, but this:
4 times as many children in England & Wales face domestic abuse compared to Scotland
From Open Democracy on 25 June 2025:
An exclusive investigation by Open Democracy has found that 377,000 children in England and Wales have been identified by local authorities as being at risk of domestic abuse in the past five years. Perhaps even more shockingly, 396 of these children have died in the same period.
From March 2025:
The Scottish Government has today (26 March 2025) published the latest official annual Children’s Social Work Statistics for Scotland regarding child protection. This uses data collected from all 32 local authorities in Scotland on child protection processes from 1 August 2023 to 31 July 2024.
During the 2023-2024 year, 3,167 children were registered onto the child protection register, a decrease of 2% from 2022-23 (3,234). The figures show that a total of 2,129 children were on the Child Protection Register on 31 July 2024, an increase of 3% since 2023 (2,077).
The most common concerns identified at child protection planning meetings for children registered during the 2023-24 year were: domestic abuse (45% of children registered), neglect (42% of children registered), parental substance use (39% of children registered), parental mental ill health (37% of children registered), and emotional abuse (33% of children registered).
All things being equal, you’d expect the figure for England & Wales to be around 11 times larger than the roughly 1 500 (45% of 3 167) reported as being at risk of domestic abuse in Scotland, or 16 500 but it’s around 70 000 (377 000 over 5 years), more than 4 times higher.

Whitabootery Statistics are only viable when used to make the SNP-run Scottish Government look baaaaad !
When the rUK/England stats are unfavourable …they disappear from BBC Scotland’s consciousness .
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“As UK Minister reports failure to urgently support domestic abuse victims in England and Wales, why BBC Scotland is avoiding this dark topic”.
I believe the answer….. as to why that is …..is as clear as the nose(s) on our Face(s)….
BBC’s commandment in Scotland….
‘Thy shall not highlight anything #Bad connected to the UK or UK political parties’
Together with their other BBC commandment….
‘Thy shall only ever try to highlight anything and everything that we , the BBC, deem to be #BAD that is connected to Scotland.
(Especially the #SNP who, we the BBC, consider to be #VeryVeryBad) …..
See our BBC website, our BBC (Mis)Reporting Scotland (as in our no real honest) News programmes, our BBC GMS Radio (also no real honest news) programmes and all and any of our BBC (biased) political programmes , our new (biased) Podcast called (ironically) Scotscast and also all and any of our BBC political debate programmes….whose main themes and topics are usually tainted by a huge dose of what is our BBC (orchestrated) vendetta which is basically mostly #SNPBAD .
There endeth the real lesson via the BBC’s behaviour and attitude within Scotland.
Liz S
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Violence is truly has caused a lot of pain and heartache for centuries. No matter if it is verbal or physical it has impacted us all rather directly or indirectly. The world would be a better place if each person lived by the Golden Rule, treat others like you want to be treated. Soon though that will be.
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