URGENT: Every voice matters — Reunite these families /// Hjelpetiltak (Support Measures) /// URGENT: Every voice matters — Reunite these families /// Hjelpetiltak (Support Measures) ///
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Hjelpetiltak (Support Measures)

Support measures (hjelpetiltak) are intended to help families early—before intrusive interventions. Know what to demand and how to document.

Definition

Hjelpetiltak (“support measures”) are assistance measures used by Norway’s Child Welfare Services (Barnevernet) to help children and families when there are concerns about a child’s care situation or development. The core idea is that the state should try early, practical support before escalating to more intrusive interventions.

Typical examples

Support measures vary by municipality and case, but commonly include:

  • Guidance and counselling for parents (parenting support, routines, conflict reduction)
  • Support person or family contact person
  • Kindergarten/SFO support or structured activities
  • Respite care (avlastning) and practical help in the home
  • Family group conferencing and coordination across services

Voluntary vs. compulsory measures

Most hjelpetiltak are presented as voluntary and based on cooperation with the family. In some situations, however, the system can move toward compulsory assistance measures when voluntary measures are considered insufficient. This is typically decided by the Child Welfare Tribunal (Barneverns- og helsenemnda) and must meet strict legal conditions.

Do Better Norge perspective

Support measures can be genuinely helpful—but they can also be misused or poorly implemented:

  • “Voluntary” under pressure: families may feel forced to consent because refusal is framed as proof of poor cooperation.
  • Undefined goals: measures are started without clear objectives, end dates, or evaluation criteria.
  • Service gaps: lack of capacity can lead to token measures that do not address the real problem.

In an Article 8 (right to family life) context, weak or superficial hjelpetiltak can later be cited as “failed support,” even when the measures were never fit for purpose.

What families should insist on (practical)

  • A written plan describing goals, duration, and how success will be measured.
  • Regular evaluations with documented minutes (what improved, what did not, why).
  • Proportionality: measures should be the least intrusive option that still protects the child.
  • Complaints and oversight: if measures are unsafe, irrelevant, or discriminatory, document it and consider escalating through formal complaint channels.

References and official resources

Do Better Norge note: Support measures should strengthen families—not create a paper trail for escalation. Document everything and demand clarity.

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