1 / 18

Rationale for research

HERE TO STAY People with Learning Disabilities from E thnic M inority C ommunities including New Migrants Professor David Sallah Dr Olga Kozlowska 26 th September in Birmingham and 10 th October 2013 in London. Rationale for research.

teleri
Download Presentation

Rationale for research

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HERE TO STAYPeople with Learning Disabilities from Ethnic Minority Communities including New MigrantsProfessor David SallahDr Olga Kozlowska 26th September in Birmingham and 10thOctober 2013 in London

  2. Rationale for research • The research evidence shows that people from ethnic minority communities experience insufficient and inappropriate services DoH, Valuing People (2001) and Valuing People Now (2009) • There is a need to provide evidence on learning disabilities and ethnicity DoH, Learning Disabilities and Ethnicity: A Framework for Action (2004) • There is a need to address equality issues and improve well-being of this population Equality and Human Rights Commission, How Fair is Britain? The first Triennial Review (2010); Equality Act 2010; HM Government, The Equality Strategy - Building a Fairer Britain (2010)

  3. Research aims • To explore what happens to people with learning disabilities from ethnic minority and new migrant communities in terms of access to the services • To explore how can we improve their experience.

  4. Research questions • How many are receiving support from learning disability services? • What is their experience of using services? • And what happens to those who are not receiving any support and how are they coping? • How can the services engage with the ethnic minority and new migrant communities to promote their wellbeing and improve their life chances?

  5. Research population(nationally and locally) • practitioners • service providers in: • health, social care and education • statutory, private and voluntary sectors • policy makers • commissioners • family carers • people with learning disabilities

  6. Benefits of the research This research is: • filling ‘knowledge gap’ -improve the knowledge base of service commissioners/providers, family carers and wider communities and researchers • delivering new information - information on ways of engaging with communities and meet future needs of people from black and ethnic minority communities and new migrants • bringing improvement - improve health and emotional well-being of people who needs the service - improve independence, choice and well-being within the community - increase partnership and promote services for people with learning disabilities

  7. Definitions Learning disability includes the presence of: • a significantly reduced ability to understand new or complex information, to learn new skills (impaired intelligence), with; • a reduced ability to cope independently (impaired social functioning); • which started before adulthood, with a lasting effect on development. Valuing People, 2001

  8. Definitions By ethnic minoritieswe mean groups other than white British. By new migrantswe mean people who are not British citizens but resident permanently or temporarily in England; this includes asylum seekers, refugees, seasonal workers and travelers, from all ethnic groups from within and outside of the European Union.

  9. How many people… Methodology • To estimate prevalence of learning disabilities in this group, we approach health, social care and education organisations, and organisations working with migrants and people with learning disabilities. • area: England, Black Country (Wolverhampton, Dudley, Sandwell, Walsall) • information collected: ethnicity, nationality, country of birth, language, religion

  10. What happens to people in and outside services…workforceMethodology • Focus groups and surveys with service providers, commissioners and policy makers to explore their understanding of the problem. • More than 300 participated in the online survey (survey open throughout duration of the project) • More than 100 participated in the face-to-face interviews

  11. What happens to people in and outside services…service usersMethodology • Interviews with people with learning disabilities and/or their family carers to explore their experiences • We are still recruiting (‘Request to the service providers’ in the pack) for interviews

  12. Main barriers faced when collecting evidence • Research is not a priority in times of high time and money pressures experienced by service providers • Lack of continuity of policies, structures and networks of experts at the times of change • Apparent lack of awareness of learning disabilities outside learning disability services

  13. How many people…Findings • estimated number of 1,144,000 people with learning disabilities (moderate, severe or profound) in England in 2012 (IHAL, People with LD in England, 2012) what stands for 2.13% • ethnicity breakdown

  14. Prevalence of LD in the ethnic groups on the special needs register (adults,2010) and the special education needs census (children,2011)

  15. Comparison of ethnicity breakdown of general population and population of people with learning disabilities

  16. What could be done… • Consensus building • a process of consultation to produce guidelines how to make services visible and available to this population • knowledge base: information collected from service providers, commissioners, policy makers and service users • information transformed into statements (to inform the guidelines) • bringing perspectives of various practitioners for multi-disciplinary and inter-agency working

  17. Next steps • Wider consultation, including the service users • Implementation of guidelines

More Related