A new report by the Office of the Children's Commissioner says that too many children in England are still "slipping through the net" and remain at risk of sexual abuse.
The report: If it's not better; it's not the end - Inquiry into Child Sexual Exploitation in Gangs and Groups - one year on found there had been "considerable" progress in some areas of tackling child exploitation.
But "at the front line much work is still needed," said Deputy Commissioner Sue Berelowitz, who headed the inquiry.
The OCC's follow-up report has raised concerns about the level of
progress in some areas, along with the continued "under-identification"
of victims.
It said it was "worrying" that the inquiry's recommendation
to make sex education a statutory part of the curriculum had not been
adopted by the government.
The report also found "vastly different" reported rates of child sexual exploitation in different parts of England.
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