Family & Child Proceedings

Parental Capacity

Expert psychiatric evaluation of Parenting Capacity & Mental Health — the parent’s ability to provide safe and effective care while managing psychiatric symptoms. Urgent reports are available to meet strict court deadlines.

Section 12 Approved Psychiatrists
Family Procedure Rules 2010 Part 25 Compliant
Urgent Reports Available

Expert Type

  • Forensic Psychiatrist
  • Consultant Child & Adolescent Psychiatrist
  • Clinical Psychologist
  • Neuropsychologist

Applicable Law

  • Children Act 1989
  • Family Procedure Rules 2010
  • Children and Families Act 2014
  • Mental Capacity Act 2005
  • Human Rights Act 1998

When Needed

These assessments are essential in public law proceedings when a parent’s mental health diagnosis raises concerns regarding child safety and stability.

What Is a Parenting Capacity & Mental Health Assessment?

This assessment evaluates how a parent’s mental health profile impacts their functional ability to meet a child’s developmental and safety needs. It involves a detailed clinical examination of psychiatric history, current symptom presentation, and the parent’s insight into their condition in the context of childcare responsibilities.

The evaluation adheres to the Children Act 1989 welfare principle under section 1, determining whether a parent can provide “good enough” care. Experts assess whether mental health instability poses a risk of harm or neglect, and whether the parent can engage with professional support systems effectively.

  • Psychiatric stability — assessment of current symptoms and their impact on daily functioning
  • Risk of harm — evaluating potential risks to the child arising from parental mental illness
  • Insight and compliance — the parent’s awareness of their illness and adherence to treatment
  • Ability to prioritise — ensuring the child’s needs are met ahead of the parent’s own symptomatic distress
  • Emotional regulation — the capacity to manage stress and maintain a consistent nurturing environment
  • Prognosis and change — the likelihood of mental health improvement within the child’s developmental timeframe

Our Section 12 approved psychiatrists provide independent reports tailored to the specific requirements of the Family Court. These assessments are fully Family Procedure Rules 2010 Part 25 compliant, ensuring the highest level of forensic rigour in child protection matters.

The final opinion integrates clinical evidence with functional observations to assist the court in making permanency decisions. We focus on providing a clear risk-benefit analysis regarding the parent-child relationship and the necessity of state intervention.

Key Assessment Components

Our assessment evaluates the following areas:

Clinical Psychiatric Interview

A comprehensive diagnostic session to identify mental disorders and evaluate the severity of current psychiatric symptoms.

Review of Medical Records

A detailed analysis of GP and secondary care history to identify longitudinal patterns of illness and treatment adherence.

Risk Assessment

Evaluating potential risks of emotional or physical harm to the child linked to the parent’s mental health state.

Insight Assessment

Determining the parent’s level of insight into their mental health and its impact on their parenting responsibilities.

Treatment Recommendations

Identifying specific therapeutic interventions required to improve parenting capacity and the likely timescale for change.

Observational Evidence

Assessing the parent’s ability to remain attuned and responsive to the child’s needs during symptomatic episodes.

Conditions That May Affect This Assessment

A range of psychiatric and psychological conditions can affect this assessment. These include:

Personality Disorders (EUPD, Antisocial)
Psychotic Disorders (Schizophrenia, Schizoaffective)
Affective Disorders (Bipolar Disorder, Severe Depression)
Substance Misuse and Dual Diagnosis
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Neurodevelopmental Conditions (ADHD, ASD)

The impact of these conditions on parenting capacity can be dynamic and fluctuating, requiring an expert to assess both stable and acute phases.

Assessment Process

  1. Instruction Received

    Receipt of formal instructions, court orders, and the bundle of documents for review.

  2. Expert Matched

    We match the case with a specialist psychiatrist or psychologist with specific family court expertise.

  3. Assessment Conducted

    The expert conducts a face-to-face or remote clinical interview and functional assessment.

  4. Report Delivered

    A comprehensive, Family Procedure Rules 2010 Part 25 compliant report is delivered within the agreed court timeframe.

Turnaround Times

Urgency Level Timescale
Standard Report 4-6 weeks from assessment
Priority Report 1-2 weeks
Urgent Report 1-4 days
We offer expedited turnaround times for Parenting Capacity & Mental Health assessments, often providing expert witness reports within 1-4 days.

What’s Included in the Report

Detailed Psychiatric Diagnosis
Review of Social Care Records
Assessment of Parental Insight
Risk Analysis for the Child
Functional Parenting Ability Assessment
Impact of Medication on Parenting
Prognosis for Mental Health Recovery
Recommendations for Support Services
Ability to Work with Professionals
Family Procedure Rules Part 25 Declaration of Truth

All reports are peer-reviewed for quality and our experts are available to provide oral testimony in the Family Court if required.

Frequently Asked Questions

Need a Parenting Capacity & Mental Health Report?

Contact us today for a specialist report tailored to your proceedings. We provide CVs and transparent quotes within 60 minutes of your enquiry.