If Valerie Kneale Wasn’t Safe, What Hope Do We Have for Children Who Cannot Speak?

A follow-up reflection on vulnerability, silence, and accountability in the #NHS

The case of Valerie Kneale — the 75-year-old grandmother who was sexually assaulted and fatally injured in her hospital bed — has shaken many of us. It should. It is a horror that should never have been possible.

But for those of us who have spent years working with children who cannot speak, children who cannot describe pain, children who cannot report fear, the question will not go away:

If a conscious adult woman was not safe in her hospital bed, what will protect the children who cannot communicate at all?

Valerie talked to her husband, her children, her nurses. She joked as she was taken in the ambulance. She was alert, recovering, stable.

And still, she was violently assaulted inside a ward surrounded by staff.

Now imagine a child who:

  • cannot say “stop”
  • cannot name the person who hurt them
  • cannot describe what was done
  • cannot identify pain or bleeding
  • cannot form a sentence
  • cannot understand what happened
  • cannot hold eye contact or interpret danger
  • cannot run or call for help
  • relies on adults for intimate care
  • is used to being touched, cleaned, repositioned, restrained, lifted, moved

What chance would they have?

What chance do non-verbal children have when we know that even adults with full capacity can be brutalised without anyone noticing?

What chance do children with PMLD, severe autism, or profound sensory needs have in systems where safeguarding can collapse behind closed doors?


The uncomfortable truth: silence is not safety

Professionals like me — teachers, heads, DSLs, SEND specialists — carry a difficult truth that the public rarely sees:

Children who cannot communicate are the most vulnerable people in our society.

Not just by circumstance.
Not just by ability.
But by systems that fail to protect them.

Many of us have spent careers watching:

  • bruises described as “accidental”
  • distress dismissed as “behaviour”
  • infections blamed on “poor hygiene at home”
  • regression labelled “part of their condition”
  • sedation used too freely
  • concerns minimised by overstretched staff
  • families gaslit or patronised
  • agency workers rotating through intimate care roles
  • whistleblowers ignored

So when an elderly woman can be fatally assaulted inside the NHS — in a ward with keycard entry, with staff on duty, with student nurses raising concerns — is it any wonder that many of us are thinking about children who cannot speak, cannot resist, and cannot tell?


I cannot stop thinking about the children

Children whose faces I have known.
Children whose trust I have held.
Children who depended on staff who were kind — and sometimes staff who were not.
Children who flinched when approached.
Children who cried silently.
Children who froze.
Children who could not tell us why.

Safeguarding is not a checkbox.
It is an ethical burden.
It is the thing you carry home and cannot put down.


The Valerie Kneale case must be a turning point

Not because of one horrific assault.
Not because of one ward that lost control.
But because it exposes something we have needed to admit for a long time:

We are assuming safety where safety has not been proven.

We assume staff are always trustworthy.
We assume systems are robust.
We assume someone else is checking.
We assume “these things don’t happen here.”

But they do. They have. And they will again — unless the silence around vulnerable children ends.


What must change — for children who cannot speak

This is what real safeguarding looks like:

1. Mandatory independent safeguarding audits

Not internal.
Not trust-led.
Truly independent, unannounced, with legal authority.

2. Two-staff rules for intimate care

Already common in schools.
Should be non-negotiable in hospitals, respite settings, and children’s homes.

3. Mandatory CCTV in all communal areas

No exceptions.
No “privacy loopholes.”
Cameras save lives.

4. Strong whistleblowing protections

Fear of retaliation kills safeguarding.

5. Serious criminal consequences for falsified notes or ignored injuries

Neglect is not an administrative error.
It is harm.

6. Specialist training for all staff working with non-verbal children

Understanding communication differences is a safeguarding skill, not an optional extra.

7. Parents must have the right to stay

Valerie’s family asked to stay the night.
They were refused.

That must never happen again — especially to a child with profound needs.


We owe it to every child like Valerie — a child who cannot tell

Valerie Kneale had a voice.
She had a family.
She had capacity.
She had everything in her favour — and she still died from an assault inside a hospital.

Children with complex needs do not have those protections.

They have only us.

The question is not:
“How could this happen?”
We know how.

The real question is:
“What are we going to do to stop it happening to someone who cannot speak at all?”

We cannot be silent.
Not after this.
Not ever again.

angelique5

Ange Anderson is a visionary educational consultant who has revolutionized therapeutic and technological support for the neuro-divergent community. Her innovative methods have been widely recognized and she has appeared on many podcasts worldwide and spoken at educational conferences across the world. She is the former headteacher of a leading specialist school and now supports schools and parents on site / at home, as well as remotely. As well as writing academic papers she writes for magazines catering for those who are neuro-divergent. She is the author of special educational books published by Routledge . Her book on utilizing virtual reality as a tool for those with unique minds has been translated into Arabic expanding her impact to international markets. She is an esteemed advisor to a leading global VR company. VR was the catalyst for her latest book ‘The Cosmic Caretaker’. She has also self-published several children's books and both edited and contributed to 'The Future of Special Schools'.