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Principled approach

Posted: 08 April 2004 | Subscribe Online


Family support services such as short breaks, domiciliary or outreach services, befriending schemes, youth and after school clubs and play schemes have long been recognised as providing vital support to families with disabled children.

But service providers often find it difficult to include children and young people with autistic spectrum disorders in these services. As a result, parents of children and teenagers with ASD are often struggling with little support. The final stage of a recent research study set out to investigate how family support and short-break services can be provided appropriately for these families.

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Overall, our findings highlighted that all service providers must ensure that the child's needs and views are central to service provision - a vision shared by all the recent initiatives for the development of good practice. More specifically, the research established six basic principles for working with families with children with ASD. These principles are fundamental and could help ensure all disabled children's needs are met appropriately by services.

For those providing services, a basic understanding of autistic spectrum disorders is fundamental. Professionals need to understand the child and their views, their parents' deep concerns about their welfare, the way services need to be consistent and tightly co-ordinated, and the need for children and teenagers to be provided with a safe environment and a feeling of control.

1 The first principle is knowing about the child and their views. This recognises that each child and teenager has their own unique personality. Carers need to spend time to get to know the child, their ways of communicating, interests and sensibilities, as well as the issues that trigger anxiety. This knowledge will also underpin respect for the routines and rituals that a child needs in order to feel in control. Another aspect of this principle is that children should be involved in choosing the services they use, and in planning and reviewing these services.

2 The second principle is respecting parents and developing their trust. Services must recognise that parents are the experts on their child, and that their child's welfare is of paramount importance to them. As noted above, parents have often supported and cared for their child with little outside help and can be worried that carers will not know how to treat their child or be able to cope. Conversely, they may cope too well, and leave parents feeling threatened or undermined. In order to ensure parents trust, service providers and front-line workers must show a detailed understanding of and commitment to their child and be proactive in communicating with parents throughout service provision.

3 The third principle is about the importance of team and multi-agency working - a common theme. Children with ASD need consistent support, for example, in the way their behaviour is responded to, and so all agencies involved in the child's life (education, health, social services and voluntary organisations) need to work together. This demands time, thoroughness and a professional approach that makes no assumptions regarding the individual's needs or the way other agencies respond to them.

4 The fourth principle relates to providing children with a feeling of control. Children and young people with ASD have difficulty with knowing what is going on, and with predicting what should happen next. Anxiety is often shown through withdrawing into themselves or self-stimulation through repetitive acts such as switching light switches on and off or challenging behaviour.

In order to ensure children and young people with ASD understand what is happening and feel a level of control over their services or activities, services and parents need to: plan introductions to services or new activities, prepare the child for what will happen, and ensure the child knows when the service is going to end.

5 The fifth principle relates to the lack of awareness of danger, or of the consequences of their actions many children with ASD show. Services for these children need to provide a safe environment. Carers need to be vigilant, and to have strong boundaries which are consistent. Workers and carers should also think carefully about the possible implications of grouping children and young people, and ensure there is a quiet space in group environments that children can use when they need to. They should also be aware that children often find security and safety in their routines.
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6 The sixth principle recognises that children with autistic spectrum disorders can and do develop and take more control over their lives. Services play a vital role in developing children's independence by widening their experience of new environments and people. But this relies on carers helping children's communication, so that they can increase their choice of, and involvement in, appropriate activities. They also need to support their development through providing new activities and introducing them appropriately, and taking opportunities as they arise.

These principles are based on thinking through each individual's needs in order to provide tailored, appropriate services for children with ASD and their families. Developing sound understanding and real relationships are crucial to this, but these need time, commitment and communication from service providers to develop.

What is autism?   

 Autism is a lifelong developmental disability that affects the way a person communicates and relates to other people. The ability to develop friendships is impaired as is the capacity to understand other people's feelings and emotions. People with autism have impairments in social interaction and communication and imagination. These difficulties result from underlying problems in the brain function responsible for evaluating meaning and recognising the significance of situations. They impair the sense of self and affect the individual's ability to feel involved and their memory of what has happened to them. While a person with autism spectrum disorder can be very emotional, they find it difficult to make sense of their own feelings. Autistic spectrum disorders acknowledges that autism occurs in differing degrees of severity and in a variety of forms.

The research 

The study focused on 20 children being provided with a variety of services, for example residential short breaks, regular sessions with an sessional worker, monthly attendance at a Saturday play scheme or family-based short breaks and a play scheme in the summer.  

Only one of the eight areas involved in the research offered services specifically for children and young people with ASD. The other seven offered services for disabled children, and were successfully providing breaks and support for children and teenagers with ASD.  

Eighteen boys and two girls were involved in this study, ranging in age from five to 20 years. Two of the male teenagers were described as having Asperger's syndrome while most had learning difficulties.  

The research was funded by the Community Fund and undertaken at the Norah Fry Research Centre in association with Shared Care Network.   

Beth Tarleton is a research fellow at the Norah Fry Research Centre.  For a pack on working with families of children with ASD contact Barnardo's tel 01268 522 872, fax 01268 284 804, or e-mail: despatch.services@barnardos.org.uk



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