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What does well-being mean for disabled children? Bryony Beresford Social Policy Research Unit University of York York. YO10 5DD

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Presentation on theme: "What does well-being mean for disabled children? Bryony Beresford Social Policy Research Unit University of York York. YO10 5DD"— Presentation transcript:

1 What does well-being mean for disabled children? Bryony Beresford Social Policy Research Unit University of York York. YO10 5DD bab3@york.ac.uk

2 Some definitions  Children  up to and including 18 years  In the UK disabled children include:  children with physical impairments/disabilities  children with learning difficulties  children with complex health care needs requiring multiple involvement of statutory services  children with degenerating conditions

3 Outcome indicators for children in England  Every Child Matters (2003)  England government’s strategy to transform children’s services  Includes a framework by which children’s outcomes can be examined  Five key domains:  Being healthy  Staying safe  Achieving and enjoying  Making a positive contribution  Economic well-being  Indicators in each of these domains are used to:  examine and track children’s well-being and outcomes  assess quality of services and extent to which they are supporting these outcomes  used at a national and local level

4 Does the Every Child Matters framework work for disabled children?  Although developed in consultation with children, disabled children were not included in this process  Concerns:  Are these domains of child well-being / child outcomes meaningful for disabled children?  Are they appropriate?  Is anything missing from this framework?  What does, for example, ….  …‘Being Healthy’ mean for a child with complex health care needs? .. ‘Achievement’ mean for a young person with a degenerating condition?  …‘Enjoyment’ mean for a child with severe autism?  …‘Positive contribution’ mean for children with profound and multiple disabilities  … ‘Economic well-being’ mean for a disabled young person who will never be able to take on paid work?

5 Existing evidence from research about disabled children’s outcomes  Draws attention to the fact that disabled children typically enjoy and value the same things as non- disabled children.  Highlights the fact that disabled children have poorer outcomes, and are at increased risk of poor physical and/or mental/emotional health  But research has not typically been conducted ‘alongside’ non-disabled children  Written about, and therefore understood, ‘in isolation’  Any comparisons made with non-disabled children’s lives are typically superficial  The outcomes for disabled children research project

6 The research  The questions  What do disabled children and young people value about their lives?  What are their desired outcomes  What do they feel is necessary to them achieving positive outcomes (now and in the future)?  Focused on children with:  Complex health needs  Autistic spectrum disorders  Degenerative conditions  Do not use speech to communicate due to physical/neurological impairment  95 families, representing 100 children (2-19yrs)  Over 40 children directly participated through (mainly) face-to-face work and some group discussion work  Interviews and focus groups with 90 mothers and 18 fathers  Interviews with 27 ‘other informants’

7 How did the research findings map against the Every Child Matters framework?  Disabled children typically enjoy, value and prioritise the same things as non-disabled children.  BUT difficulties or inadequacies with the framework 1.For a disabled child, outcomes or well-being can be about maintenance as well as about improvements or progress 2.The ‘meaning’ of the five domains could be different for disabled children compared to non-disabled children 3.Communication is not sufficiently recognised within the framework 4.The framework does not adequately reflect a hierarchy of outcomes  The nature of the child’s disability and its severity impacts on the extent to which the framework as it currently stands ‘works’ or doesn’t work for disabled children

8 1. Maintenance instead of progress  Sometimes progress or improvement cannot be expected to occur  Degenerative conditions  Physical or learning impairments limits progress or further development: potential has been reached  Instead, the emphasis was on ‘maintaining where they are at’…  Abilities  Physical functioning  Sources of enjoyment  (Best possible) state of health  Levels of achieved independence  Maintenance of achieved outcomes was absent from the framework and indicators

9 …some examples  ‘Being Healthy’  being comfortable and not in pain  ‘Enjoying and achieving’  Academic achievement not prioritised  Acquisition of skills which, among non-disabled children, might be taken for granted were keen as key achievements (money skills, using public transport, life skills)  Enjoyment for some disabled children may not ‘feel very child like’ : some children with autistic spectrum conditions, children at the end stage.  Making a positive contribution  Having the opportunity to make choices – significant and everyday  Economic well-being  Being meaningfully occupied as opposed to readiness for training/employment

10 2. The need to redefine the meanings of the ECM outcomes or indicators used.  The ECM outcomes or indicators did not always capture or represent disabled children’s lives or priorities.  Desired outcomes identified by disabled children, parents and ‘other informants’ were at a more ‘basic’ level than those set out in the ECM framework  Outcomes or aspects of well-being perhaps ‘taken for granted’ in typically developing, healthy children  Developing social and life skills strongly prioritised over academic achievements  Outcomes not linked to chronological age or typical life stage transitions

11 3. Communication  There is an indicator relating to communication in the ECM framework but it only concerns very young children’s communication  Being able to communicate oneself / having a system by which can communicate  Regarded as being fundamental to well-being  Across all ages

12 4. ‘A hierarchy of outcomes’  The ECM framework did not adequately represent the fact that there appears to be a hierarchy of outcomes  Aspects of well-being identified by disabled children, and their parents as being fundamental to well-being:  being healthy (for example, the lack of pain)  being able to communicate  staying safe  If these not happening for a child then other aspects of well-being (enjoyment, achievement etc)  Unlikely to be experienced  Not experienced to full potential

13 Conclusions and implications  A normative, developmental model of child outcomes is insufficient/inappropriate for disabled children  Definitions of key concepts of well-being / outcomes need to be widened / reconceptualised to reflect the lives and experiences of disabled children  Some implications for the measurement of well-being at a population level….  The need for disabled child specific well-being measures to be widely and routinely collected  Addressing the lack of high quality/robust measures of well-being which can be used by/for groups of disabled children  The dearth of high quality standardised psychometric measures  Properly including disabled children in government surveys and not routinely using proxies: not currently happening in the UK.


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