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I am delighted to share with you our Sufficiency Strategy for 2024-2027.
This is our strategy for how we will continue to implement and deliver arrangements that wrap around our children and families to ensure they receive the right support at the right time.
We want to deliver the best possible outcomes for children when they are in our care and as they enter adulthood.
Our aim is always to keep our children close to home and to be the best corporate parents that we can be.
Where we can, we want to support families to stay together, but where children and young people do need care, we want to make sure this is in family-based care where possible and that we support extended family networks to be able to raise their children.
We will actively seek out and work with a child’s direct and extended family and friends in considering the best forms of support.
We will prioritise loving relationships for all children in care and care leavers and ensure we have a wide range of care options in place locally through having the right number, type and quality of foster carers, residential homes, and accommodation.
Where children cannot return to their birth family, we want to secure timely and successful permanence through adoption wherever this is assessed as the best plan for the child.
Our ambitions for all children and young people in Dorset are set out in our partnership’s ten-year plan – Children, Young People and Families' Plan 2023 to 2033 - Dorset Council.
This Sufficiency Strategy and it’s supporting action plan are how we implement the activity required for our Good Care Provision priority.
My sincere thanks to all the families, carers, colleagues, partners, and elected members who all play a huge role in making Dorset a great place to grow up and above all to our amazing children and young people who have told us the importance of belonging and what that means to them – that they want all children to thrive in Dorset.
My commitment to you is that we will continue to work tirelessly to make that a reality for every child and young person in Dorset.
Theresa Leavy,
Executive Director People: Children’s Services
Dorset Council
Welcome to Dorset Council’s Placement Sufficiency Strategy for Children in Care and Care Leavers, 2024 to 2027.
Dorset Council is committed to supporting a child’s right to family life and we are focused on providing services that:
When children do come into our care it is important that we are able to offer the right home that meets their needs and enables them to remain in touch with the people and communities that are important to them.
As children leave our care and enter adulthood, we want them to have the best possible access to high quality accommodation with the right support that meets their needs.
This strategy sets out how Dorset Council will meet these objectives.
It sets out our understanding of current needs, availability of provision, and our plans for development over the next 3 years.
Our ambitions for our children in care and care leavers have informed our ‘Strategic Priorities’ for this Sufficiency Strategy.
Our Strategic Priorities are to:
The Strategy sets out in detail how we will go about addressing each of those seven Strategic Priorities and identifies some high-level success measures. If we are successful in delivering this strategy, we would expect to see:
We will measure ourselves against these high-level indicators, while also setting out more detailed actions and performance measures in an accompanying action plan.
There are a range of legal duties associated with an overall ‘Sufficiency Duty’ on local authorities as part of the Children Act, 1989, to secure accommodation for children in their care within the local authority area:
It takes a community to make a difference to the lives of our care experienced children and young people.
This strategy is aimed at ensuring a sufficient quantity and range of high-quality care placements and accommodation for children in care and care leavers so that we support improved outcomes.
Our Dorset Promise to children in care and care leavers makes a number of commitments to how we will work with and support our children and young people by:
View the full promise on the Council’s website.
Following an Independent Review of Children’s Social Care, the government published a new strategy ‘Stable Homes Built on Love’, which brings forward a range of plans to reform how children’s social care is delivered and has changed the national context for social care placement sufficiency.
These reforms are being tested through a number of different pathfinders, the most relevant of which to this strategy are the ‘Families First’ and ‘Regional Care Cooperative’ pathfinders.
Dorset Council has been invited to be a pathfinder authority to implement the reforms under the Families First for Children programme, the key strands of which are:
We will work on testing and learning from these new approaches over the next 2 years before wider roll out across the country.
Regional Care Cooperatives have been recommended to address challenges with care provision across the country.
They are described as a model for providing homes for children where responsibility for planning, commissioning and delivery sits at a regional level, rather than with individual local authorities.
The government’s intended outcome of this approach is improved planning which increases the available number of care placements and enables local authorities to manage the care market.
Regional areas have been invited to participate in these pathfinders. Dorset Council, along with 13 other local authorities in the South-West has expressed an interest in becoming a regional care cooperative and have moved to phase 2.
Regional Care Collaboratives will be required to focus on the following activities.
The Dorset Strategic Alliance for Children and young people is a multi-agency partnership which brings together senior people from across the partnership to shape and transform services for children, young people, and their families to deliver our vision which is:
Quote “We want Dorset to be the best place to be a child, where communities thrive, and families are supported to be the best they can be.”
As a partnership we are committed to laying the foundations for improving life outcomes now that will last into future generations, so have developed a new ten-year plan that provides a strategic framework for how partners work together.
Our priorities for the plan are grouped under the seven following themes.
In delivery of this sufficiency strategy, we will be guided by the aims set out in the ‘Good Care Provision’ theme which states that we will explore different ways to promote family support through family decision-making and new approaches to kinship care, working with the wider family and community to provide safe support for our children and young people:
Our Corporate Parenting Strategy sets out the key priorities and actions required to ensure we are providing our looked after children and young people with the best start in life so they can achieve their full potential.
There are more boys (278, 60%) than girls (187, 40%) in our care family.
These proportions are greatly affected by the profile of our unaccompanied children, with only 1 unaccompanied girl in our care.
If this cohort were to be excluded the proportions would be more equal with 53% male and 47% female.
The majority of our children in care (77%) are white, although when excluding unaccompanied children this proportion is much higher at 90%.
The table below shows the ethnic backgrounds of our total care family and compares unaccompanied children with children from Dorset.
Ethnic background | All children in care % | Unaccompanied children % | Children from Dorset % |
---|---|---|---|
White | 77 | 0 | 90 |
Mixed raced | 5 | 0 | 6 |
Asian or Asian British | 1 | 3 | 1 |
Black or Black British | 4 | 21 | 1 |
Other ethnic group | 12 | 76 | 2 |
The following areas of strength were identified and areas for development
In summary:
1. As most of our children in care have remained in care until their 18th birthday, our care leaver family has been growing over the last 3 years.
We now have 542 care experienced young people in our care leaver family, with just over 300 receiving a service from a Personal Advisor.
We anticipate that this growth will continue slowly until we reach a peak of around 320 care leavers receiving a service in 2025, when it will begin to fall in line with the reduction of children in care.
2. Of those care leavers that are receiving a service a higher proportion are female (164, 54%) than male (139, 46%).
This is different to the current children in care population where there are more boys than girls. There are a similar proportion of care leavers as children in care that have a disability 10 per cent (33).
3. A high proportion of our care leavers that are receiving a service are aged between 18 and 21 years. .
Age Bracket
12 to 17 = 1 which is less than 1%
18 = 63 or 21%
19 = 77 or 25%
20 = 63 or 21%
21 = 50 or 16%
22 to 30 = 52 or 17%
4. A slightly higher proportion of our care leavers are white (79%) and 21% are from Black and Minority ethnic backgrounds, but this profile may change as our current unaccompanied children become older and they go through the asylum claim process.
5. 97% of our care leavers are living in accommodation that is considered suitable.
Whilst the picture is improving and we have seen an increase in Care Leavers remaining in their foster placement after their 18th birthday, we know not as many of our young people are benefiting from these arrangements as we would like.
A high proportion of our care leavers live in supported accommodation (for longer than we would like) as a result of lack of alternative move on provision.
6. The Care leaver service undertakes weekly monitoring for a small number of care leavers placed in unsuitable accommodation, this includes young people who are living in temporary B+B and young people in prison to ensure active plans are in place regarding finding suitable accommodation and planning for release from prison.
7. Following a 60% response from young people in the New Belongings survey, ‘Your Life Beyond Care) we have rich information which supports us in service development and delivery for our Care Leavers.
In addition, care experienced young people have been involved in the design and delivery of our strategies and plans across the year – including our Corporate Parenting Strategy and the development of the Dorset Promise.
Below highlights areas of strength and areas for development
In summary:
In our last strategy we set ourselves several goals, this section describes the progress we have made:
We are successfully rebalancing the system towards earlier help and as a result we are seeing a reduction of children from Dorset entering our care.
Our locality model is delivering good services for families and independent evaluation indicates that children and their families are getting the right help at the right time.
Our Safeguarding Families Together pilot programme is delivering services to families in the west of the county.
This model brings practitioners with expertise in working with adults together with children’s social care in order to provide a whole family approach.
This is helping support children to remain being cared for by their families.
The Harbour outreach model has successfully supported more young people to remain with their families or to go back to live with their families after a period in care.
This model has primarily been working with young people living in Weymouth and Portland and the west of the county.
There is insufficient capacity to offer services to young people living in the east of the county.
We have invested in the development of a Pause practice in Dorset, which seeks to support women, who have had children removed from their care by offering an intensive and supportive 18-month programme that involves a trusting relationship between a woman and their PAUSE practitioner.
Currently 22 women are being supported by the Pause practice.
Parent and child placements are placements that can be either foster carer or within a specialist residential assessment facility.
The purpose of parent and child placements is to provide parents with the support they need to care for their children or as part of a court ordered assessment.
Dorset Fostering Service has 3 fostering households that are approved to provide parent and child placements and have been utilised on 4 separate occasions this year.
Where we are unable to use our in-house parent and child foster placements, we refer to our Independent Fostering Agency Framework, we used independent parent and child placements on 2 occasions this year.
There are no specialist residential parenting provisions within the county of Dorset but there are provisions in our neighbouring authorities.
Our need for residential assessments places is low, year to date we have only commissioned one residential unit place.
Strengthening our support offer is a priority to promote family stability and quality of life so that children can continue to live with their birth families.
The short breaks offer is key to this.
We commission a short breaks children’s home offering four places in the Chesil locality which currently serves the whole county, meaning that some children travel significant distances, and we know we need more provision.
We have developed an overnight short breaks children’s home in the east of the county (Hayeswood) which will offer two to three places.
We also need provision in the North locality offering at least two places.
Short breaks with linked host families are also needed to help fill the gap in overnight provision and this is being developed with our Fostering and Shared Lives services.
We have a range of short breaks daytime activities and have been promoting improved accessibility to a range of activities for children and young people with disabilities through our Holiday Activity and Food Programme.
There is not currently enough short breaks provision in Chesil and West localities and the offer for those aged 18 to 25 years needs significant development.
We are working with NHS colleagues to develop provision for children with physical disabilities and complex health needs.
Families in receipt of direct payments can struggle to find people and/or providers that are able to support them.
Currently we are spot purchasing a range of in-home and community support for families who have children with complex needs and disabilities, and it is not cost-effective.
We recognise that overtime birth family's circumstance's change and safeguarding concerns and risks that lead to children becoming children in care may reduce.
We will therefore ensure that reunification to birth families is kept under review and take the necessary assessments and support plans to return children to live with their birth families.
We will:
We have 171 fostering households:
The demographic make-up of our foster carers does not match the demographics of our care population.
There are fewer carers from Black and Minority Ethnic Groups and fewer carers that can care for teenagers.
We have improved efficiency by reviewing the availability of our approved foster carers to increase the proportion who are active and able to receive children, improving our utilisation rate from 0.65 to 1.08.
This has been achieved both by supporting more carers to provide placements, and by deregistering those carers who have reached the end of their fostering career.
We know that Mockingbird foster carer constellations improve resilience in the system and support positivity, connection, and retention.
Since 2020 we have implemented five constellations out of a planned ten, which we are aiming to achieve by the end of 2024.
We have restructured the service to support this, with a training programme in place.
Short term placements with mainstream foster carers are more likely to be with Dorset Council than independent sector agencies.
We believe that our own provision is meeting more complex and challenging needs than private sector providers.
We need more Dorset Council foster carers to improve outcomes for children including being able to live closer to home.
To look after children and young people with complex needs and who are members of sibling groups of 3 or more children, foster carers need properties that have sufficient living space, and we need to support this by offering capital funding support to adapt properties.
This will improve the availability, stability and permanence outcomes for the children and young people who are in our care.
We forecast that we need an additional 10 internal foster carers for children from Dorset and a further 20 more internal foster carers for unaccompanied children per year.
We have 108 children with independent foster carers, which is 38% of our total cohort of children in foster care compared to 45% nationally.
We participate in regional commissioning arrangements for the delivery of a fostering framework and hold Independent Fostering Agency Surgeries to develop relationships and seek to support better matching for children.
We would like to develop better relationships with local foster carers that work for IFAs and the IFAs themselves so that we can increase the number of these that are available for local children.
When a child requires to become looked after we strive to identity and place within existing family networks.
We currently have 58 connected person carers.
As part of our work through the national pathfinder we are keen to make sure that we significantly increase the number of children that can be cared for in their extended family.
We will also explore options for children to leave care through putting place permanent kinship arrangements.
For young people moving into adulthood, the Staying Put scheme offers the opportunity to remain with their foster carer after they have turned 18.
We need to develop this further.
Most of our care leavers remain in care until their 18th birthday.
Whilst the picture is improving and we have seen an increase to 29 Care Leavers remaining in their foster placement after their 18th birthday, we know not as many of our young people are benefiting from these arrangements as we would like.
We will:
There are currently 31 children’s homes places available in Dorset with 20 Dorset children in care living there.
We have reduced the number of young people placed in residential care settings over the life of our previous strategy by 10 and there are currently 53.
Many Dorset children and young people who are looked after in children’s homes live outside of Dorset, sometimes in neighbouring counties (15 young people) but too often far away from their families and friends (18 young people).
Sometimes this is because their needs are particularly complex and they need specialist therapeutic provision, but sometimes this is because we don’t have the right provision locally.
We need to ensure that young people have every opportunity to live within Dorset.
To achieve this more local children’s homes are needed.
College House was opened late 2022 and can accommodate up to 3 children, the home is currently rated as Good.
It is part of our harbour outreach model and has a foster carer linked to the provision.
The Cherries Residential Home for children with learning and physical disabilities can accommodate up to 9 children and is rated Good by Ofsted.
It has not been full to capacity for some time and the building itself it quite old-fashioned and not as homely as other more modern children’s homes.
There we are in the process of moving this home to a more homely new build property in Weymouth, Chestnut House, which will offer homes for up to 5 children with disabilities, from early 2024.
We have invested in workforce development for our practitioners working in our residential provision, working alongside the Mulberry Bush, to deliver a level 4 qualification for all workers.
There are workforce challenges within the children’s residential home sector, particularly in relation to registered managers.
We continue to strengthen relationships with Dorset providers and where appropriate enter block contract arrangements with providers of Ofsted-graded Good and Outstanding homes to ensure local access for Dorset children.
We monitor the track record of children’s homes and find homes for our children where provision is of good quality.
Regrettably not all the provision in Dorset sustains this level and we will continue to work with providers to achieve good outcomes for Dorset children and young people.
There are a number of children’s homes across the county however we need additional provision for young people with complex needs, which includes single occupancy homes.
We need to develop partnership working and continue to engage with emerging providers of residential care in Dorset.
We anticipate needing a further 5 children’s homes places in the next year.
The cost of housing within the county can be a deterrent to attracting new external children’s homes providers.
Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services are mainly provided by Dorset healthcare University Foundation Trust.
This includes:
They also provide psychology services for children in care and support to foster carers.
We are working with NHS colleagues to develop care provision for children with complex needs including mental health and neurodiversity which prevents the need for hospitalisation and supports a return to family life.
There is an ongoing review and transformation across the Integrated Care System, ‘Your Mind Your Say, making mental health services better for young people in Dorset’.
This is in response to some significant and ongoing challenges, which include:
The Wessex and Dorset Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) Provider Collaborative is responsible for tier 4, specialised mental health services including in-patient services across the region, eating disorder services and a care closer to home team.
There are not enough Tier 4 places for children generally and there are particular challenges for young people experiencing mental health crisis and that need intensive treatment locally.
Plans are in place to develop a specialist 8 bedded psychiatric intensive care unit in Bournemouth.
We seek to work in partnership with children, their families, and the professional network in these circumstances, to ensure the appropriate exit plans and services are in place.
We hold a monthly liaison meeting with colleagues from NHS Dorset, part of this meeting is to review progress of young people in such facilities to understand any issues or barriers to exit plans or future services to be provided.
The Birth to Settled Adulthood Programme is progressing, and we are developing approaches and services to support children and young people where there is evidence that transition to adulthood has been particularly challenging for services in their current configurations.
This has been the case for children who are disabled, and we are developing a new service to meet the needs of children from birth to settled adulthood, normally 25 years old.
Secure welfare provision is used where we are unable to keep children safe in traditional care placements in the community, placements in such arrangements can only be agreed by the Courts.
There is a total of 13 Secure Children Homes across England and Wales which can accommodate up to 113 children however demand for such provision outstrips availability, on average there is a waiting list of 50 – 60 children at any one time seeking such an arrangement.
We have made applications for a small number of children to be placed in Secure Welfare provision however we have not placed any children in this provision since the last strategy this is either due to children’s need changing and so no longer meet criteria or we have had to seek alternative placements due to lack of availability in Secure.
If a young person is arrested and remanded to the local authorities' care, we seek to consider where safe to do so a placement within the family network.
Where this is not possible, we utilise a specialist remand foster care placement, jointly commissioned with BCP Council. In the past year we have utilised this provision on 4 occasions.
Our Adoption Service is currently provided through Aspire, the Regional Adoption Agency for Dorset and Bournemouth, Christchurch, and Poole Councils.
The service is working well. In 2022/23 15% of children who left our care did so via adoption.
This compares to 9% nationally and 14% for good and better authorities.
On timeliness, on average children adopted in the six months to end of October 2023 moved from becoming children in care to place for adoption is 536 days (compared to 376 days nationally and 342 days among statistical neighbours) and from Placement Order to a matching decision in 170 days (178 days nationally and 149 days among statistical neighbours)
Our Regional Adopting Agency ASPIRE also hold responsibly for Special Guardianship assessment and support work.
Dorset Council acknowledge that Special Guardianship Orders for some of our children is an appropriate permanence pathway and as such we have a clear special guardianship pathway and finance policy to ensure equitability in support packages offered to prospective Special Guardians.
In 2022/23, 9% of children who left our care did so via Special Guardianship Orders. This compares to 12% nationally.
We will be looking to review our financial support offer to Special Guardians and to place our Special Guardianship Service back in-house as part of a dedicated Connected Persons Service.
We have 23 carers offering Supported Lodgings carers to a total of 21 young people aged between 17 and 23 years old.
We have a further 3 carers in the assessment process.
We forecast that we need an additional 5 places in supported lodgings for unaccompanied young people.
We have been supporting providers to register with Ofsted and develop good quality services to meet regulatory requirements and evidence the outcomes for preparing for adulthood in our refreshed specification under the 2022 re-tendered framework.
Dorset Council commissions 87 local supported accommodation places (up to 18 months duration) for young people aged 16-25 through its Supported Accommodation Framework, of which:
We predict that we may need a further 30 places in line with anticipated increase of care leavers in 2025.
In 2022 Dorset was successful in being awarded a 3-year DfE grant to pilot Staying Close, which can help young people stay in touch with and get ongoing support from Children’s Home carers after they move on.
Our Staying Close project has seen young people retain links through formalised support arrangements. We are actively supporting 10 young people under Staying Close arrangements.
We have worked hard to increase the offer of accommodation, having invested in a care leaver accommodation, however we do not have sufficient affordable local homes for our care leavers, and they have told us that they don’t always feel safe in the areas that they live.
Despite our best efforts, we have a small number of care experienced young people in Bed and Breakfast at any one time and we work hard to ensure that they are moved to suitable accommodation in the shortest possible time.
Personal Advisors work hard to support young people to maintain their tenancies when they are in independent accommodation.
The housing market in Dorset is challenging and more local supported and independent housing is needed for former unaccompanied young people seeking asylum and care-experienced young adults.
There is an estimated need for housing for young adults exiting supported accommodation of 50 places per year (25-30 for care leavers and 20 for vulnerable young adults at risk of homelessness).
When 16- and 17-year-olds are at risk of homelessness we strive to ensure those young people remain with their family by undertaking mediation.
We undertake joint housing and social care assessment to understand need and present options to young people.
We currently have 17 young people placed in supported accommodation who are not children in care and are living in supported accommodation.
This accommodation is secured through our Supported Accommodation Framework.
We can also access Night Stop; a service where young people can be placed in an emergency in a host's home for short periods of time whilst assessment of needs is undertaken.
We have an externally commissioned service in place to provide advocacy and Independent Visitors for our children in care.
This contract ends in 2024.
Our anticipated use of both advocacy and independent visitors under the current contract was lower than anticipated due to low referral numbers and some challenge sin recruitment.
We also recognise that the referral process to access the support can be cumbersome for practitioners.
As part of the pathfinder and in response to new national standards it is anticipated that our need for Advocacy will grow in future years
Keeping in touch arrangements
We have an in-house service that provides supervised contact arrangements in a number of locations across the county as well as providing support when there is a requirement to observe relationships within a family as they are being assessed.
In many cases another practitioner or a carer will facilitate arrangements for keeping in touch with people that are important to a child in our care such as foster carer, residential children’s home provider, family worker or social worker.
Some children in our care do not think we are getting the levels of contact right for them at the moment, particular arrangements for keeping in touch with brothers and sisters and/or dads.
Children in care and care leavers are more likely to experience poor mental health.
There is a range of support in place including wellbeing practitioners in the children in care and care leaver nursing service; prioritised access to CAMHs; clinical psychology support – provided directly to children and young people, nut also supporting carers.
The council also makes provision for and access to support and activities such as counselling, play/art therapy and therapeutic children’s homes and education providers.
For care experienced young people the council has invested in ‘Ask Jan’ to give direct access to emotional well-being support and where required they can access Community Mental Health teams.
The clinical psychology offers to children in care and those on the edge of care is currently being reviewed as we have not got the right model in place.
In October 2023 the council approved that it would treat any person who was ‘care experienced’ as if it were a Protected Characteristic under the Equalities Act 2010 so that any future decisions on services and polices of the Council would be assessed and considered as to the impact on people with care experience.
We have developed 4 apprenticeship opportunities for our Care Leavers within the council as part of our Pathways to Employment Programme.
We have committed to fund the necessary tools and training for our apprentices, i.e., internet access at home or additional tuition.
Our care experienced young people have told us through surveys that they are less likely than their peers to have at least one good friend.
They have also told us that they would like to be able to access more mentoring opportunities or to develop relationships with trusted adults locally to where they live.
Therefore, we need to grow this area of support, both for those that live locally as well as those who live outside the county.
We have recently been awarded DfE funding to set up a mentoring and befriending programme for our care leavers.
There has been a significant growth in our need for interpretation and translation services, because of the growth in our unaccompanied asylum-seeking children and for care experienced former unaccompanied children and we are currently spot purchasing these from a range of providers at significant cost.
Our Brokerage Service works closely with our internal fostering and residential services as well as external providers of fostering, residential and supported accommodation as well as referring teams to ensure children and young people are matched to appropriate carers.
The team is also responsible for brokering support packages for both families in need of support and for individual children.
They are also responsible for undertaking due diligence checks on new provision not under framework agreements, monitoring, and quality assurance of externally commissioned provision.
The team undertake consultations and notifications for children placed outside of Dorset.
We strive to utilise all in house provision for our looked after children and where young people are placed with external providers these placements are commissioned under Framework agreements rather than spot purchased arrangements.
We have various mechanisms to track spend to ensure value for money and costs negotiations are undertaken but recognise that we could strengthen the systems around this particularly regarding negotiations of accommodation and support costs for care leavers who remain in supported accommodation.
We have also identified a need to ensure that we take a more systematic approach to ensuring that the right partners are contributing financially to or commissioning a young people's care.
Our established Sufficiency Board, chaired by the Executive Director People – Children, will continue and will oversee the delivery of this strategy.
This Board will report on progress every quarter to the Strategic Alliance for Children, Young People and Families through the ‘Good Care Provision’ work stream.
The group will develop and deliver a SMART action plan which will be reviewed annually to ensure that it responds to emerging needs, trends, and legislation, such as the proposed introduction of Regional Care Cooperatives proposed as part of the governments ‘Stable Homes Built on Love’ Strategy.
Partnership engagement with current and prospective providers of care and support for children in care and care leavers will be essential to the delivery of this strategy.
We will support more children to stay with their birth parents or within their wider family networks.
We will increase the provision of local, high quality foster care so that more children who cannot live with birth family are provided with alternative family-based care.
We will only place children and young people in residential care where their needs cannot be met within a family, and to increase local provision so that when we do so, we do not place them at distance.
We will increase and improve specialist provision for children and young people with significant mental health and /or complex needs.
We will secure permanence outside of care through adoption and special guardianship for all children for whom this is in their best interests.
We will increase the quantity and range of high-quality care leave accommodation and support to promote stability, safety, and emotional well-being.
We will manage placement resources effectively.
Success measure
This strategy was last reviewed in 2024.
The next expected review date is 2027.