It is with this understanding that adults are ultimately responsible for the safety and protection of children that the OCP ministry will seek to extend its focus and mphasise in its strategy into the future. Whilst the use of the 3-3-5 personal safety program has increased disclosure rates of child sexual abuse, often these disclosures do not result in positive outcomes for the child. The reason being is that the adult who the child has disclosed to, often is not able or willing to helpfully assist the child through their trauma and instead reacts in a way that further compounds the trauma through expressions of anger, accusations of lying and requesting the offence to be kept secret. In response to addressing these challenges, the OCP team is seeking to develop a new approach to inform and equip primary carers and teachers in knowing how to help recognise signs of abuse and trauma, how to receive disclosures of abuse and how to assist children when they disclose, thereby in doing so creating an extended guardianship environment within the child’s relationship network. The more adults looking out for the child, the safer the child will be. The OCP has identified that this message, that adults are ultimately responsible for the safety and protection of children, should to be propagated throughout all the communities under the CCT. The OCP team, however is also acutely aware of the challenges that it faces in addressing these issues amongst primary carers and in developing a strategy for engagement. Through the team’s experience of providing positive parenting support, it is often the grandparents of the children who attend, the parents themselves either are too busy working, or simply uninterested. This is a fundamental change in attitude which will be require innovative approaches to help encourage parents in CCT communities to take greater responsibility for their children’s safety and protection.