How supporting residential care staff leads to better outcomes for children
Many carers say that working in a children’s residential home is one of the most rewarding roles in social care. Carers and support staff provide stability, consistency, and day-to-day care for children who have often experienced significant adversity. But it is also a role that can be emotionally demanding, unpredictable, and, at times, overwhelming.
That is why staff wellbeing must be at the heart of every children’s home. When staff feel supported, valued, and equipped to manage the challenges of the role, children and young people benefit too.
Common challenges for staff in residential care
- Exposure to aggression: Some children may use physical or verbal aggression to communicate distress. Repeated incidents can affect staff confidence and wellbeing.
- Shift patterns and long hours: Working unsociable hours can impact sleep, family life, and recovery time.
- Emotional strain: Working alongside children’s traumatic histories can weigh heavily on carers without the right outlets for support.
- Boundary management: Staff must balance empathy with professionalism, which can be exhausting without clear guidance and support.
- Limited recovery time: Without structured reflection or decompression after incidents, staff can carry stress from one shift to the next.
How to promote staff wellbeing in children’s homes
How psychology services can help
Specialist psychology input can play a vital role in supporting staff wellbeing in children’s homes. At Gateway Psychology, we provide:
- Psychological consultation: structured opportunities for staff to reflect on practice, explore challenges, and build resilience
- Direct advice: psychological guidance for staff and managers about children’s needs and how to respond effectively
- Training: evidence-based programmes covering trauma, attachment, behaviour management, and therapeutic caregiving
- Inspection readiness: helping homes evidence how they support staff, which contributes to positive leadership and management outcomes
Caring for staff is not an optional extra: it is a core part of running a safe, effective, and nurturing children’s home. Staff who feel supported are more resilient, more consistent, and more able to provide the therapeutic caregiving that children need.
By investing in staff wellbeing, residential homes are not only protecting their teams but also improving stability, reducing placement breakdowns, and giving children the consistent relationships they deserve.
If you would like to explore how Gateway Psychology can support the wellbeing of your residential care staff, get in touch with us today
