Back to Resources
Care Planning

Digital Care Records for Children's Residential Homes

2026-06-117 min readACS Team

Care records in a children's home are more than a compliance requirement. They are the running account of a child's experience, the decisions made around them, the risks staff are managing, and the progress the team is trying to support.


When records are spread across paper files, spreadsheets, email inboxes and staff notebooks, the picture becomes harder to trust. Digital care records help by bringing information into one secure place, making it easier for staff and managers to understand what is happening.


What digital care records should include


For children's residential homes, digital care records need to cover more than basic daily notes. A useful system should connect:


  • Daily logs and handovers
  • Placement plans and care plans
  • Risk assessments
  • Incidents and safeguarding concerns
  • Medication records
  • Education and health updates
  • Family time and professional contact
  • Key-work sessions
  • Reviews, actions and management oversight

  • The value comes from connection. A daily note should be able to sit alongside a care plan goal, a risk update or a follow-up action.


    Better continuity between shifts


    Residential care depends on continuity. Staff coming onto shift need to know what happened, what changed and what still needs attention.


    Digital records improve continuity by giving teams a shared timeline. Instead of relying on memory or handwritten handover sheets, staff can see recent notes, incidents, appointments and actions in one place.


    This is especially important when a child has had a difficult day, a medication issue, contact with family, a school concern or a change in presentation. The next shift needs context, not just a short summary.


    Stronger safeguarding practice


    Safeguarding concerns often build through small details. One note may not look serious on its own, but several notes across a week can show a pattern.


    Digital care records help teams spot these patterns by keeping information searchable, dated and linked to the child. Managers can review incidents, concerns, behaviour changes, missing episodes and follow-up actions without searching through multiple folders.


    Good systems also keep an audit trail, showing who recorded, reviewed and updated information.


    Easier Ofsted evidence


    Ofsted evidence is strongest when it reflects normal day-to-day practice. Digital records help because the evidence is created as staff work, not assembled at the last minute.


    For example, a manager may need to show:


  • How a risk was identified and reviewed
  • What action followed an incident
  • Whether care plans are current
  • How staff responded to a safeguarding concern
  • What progress a child has made over time
  • How leadership monitors quality

  • When records are connected, this evidence is easier to retrieve and explain.


    Reducing admin without losing detail


    The goal is not to make records shorter for the sake of it. The goal is to make recording clearer and more useful.


    Good digital care records should:


  • Give staff prompts where detail matters
  • Avoid duplicate typing
  • Make routine notes quick to complete
  • Escalate important information
  • Help managers see gaps

  • The best systems support professional recording rather than turning care into tick boxes.


    Supporting child-centred care


    Digital records should keep the child at the centre. That means the record should show more than incidents and compliance. It should show routines, relationships, strengths, interests, progress, wellbeing and voice.


    For children who have experienced instability, the record can also help new staff understand what matters to them and what support has worked before.


    Common mistakes when moving digital


    Moving from paper to digital can go wrong if the system is treated as a technical project only. Common mistakes include:


  • Copying old paper forms into digital screens without improving the workflow
  • Training managers but not frontline staff
  • Trying to switch every module on at once
  • Not agreeing recording standards before launch
  • Choosing software that does not fit children's residential care

  • A phased rollout usually works best. Start with the records staff use every day, then build from there.


    What to ask a supplier


    Before choosing a digital care records system, ask:


  • Can we see a child timeline from daily notes through to manager actions?
  • How are incidents linked to care plans and risk assessments?
  • Can managers see missing or overdue records?
  • How is access controlled?
  • Can we export records when needed?
  • What training is included?

  • These questions will tell you whether the system is built around real practice.


    ACS provides residential care home software for children's homes and supported accommodation, including digital care records, safeguarding workflows, medication recording and compliance evidence. Get in touch if you want to see how it would work for your home.

    Share this article:

    Need Care Management Software?

    ACS helps childrens homes stay inspection-ready with built-in compliance tools.

    Start Free Trial