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Access all areas - except at home

Posted: 23 September 2004 | Subscribe Online


Behind closed doors some of our most vulnerable children are being denied their basic human rights. While millions are being spent on providing disabled access to public buildings, thousands of disabled children are unable to safely access their own homes.

The national service framework for children aims to ensure that disabled children "enjoy the highest quality of life possible" and that "their needs and those of their families are promptly and sensitively addressed".

A key element of this is surely the provision of a suitable home where children can join in family life and have their personal care needs safely met. But disabled children do not have a right to money to make their homes accessible and there is only limited help available through the disabled facilities grant. Through this, parents are means-tested for their child's adaptations, but it excludes outgoings such as mortgage payments.
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Parents on average incomes are assessed as able to pay for all adaptations. But a bedroom and bathroom ground floor extension would cost £30,000-£40,000.

Take Jack. At six he was diagnosed with duchenne muscular dystrophy, a progressive muscle weakening condition. His family moved to a bungalow. By the time he was nine they had plans for the wheelchair-accessible accommodation he would soon need. The family were assessed as able to pay for all the adaptations to their council property, but they could not. Now Jack is almost 10. He uses a wheelchair at school but cannot get it into his home.

Jack's situation does not show up on any list of unmet need or adversely affect any performance indicators. It is just unfortunate that the family can't - or, as it is implied, given that they have been through the means test - won't pay.
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The housing needs of disabled children require proper consideration at the highest levels of health, housing and social care, and a commitment to adequate funding by government. The disabled facilities grant system is under review but the needs of children require consideration in the context of child development and the impact on all family members. In Northern Ireland the means test for disabled children has been abolished. Why can't the government extend this to England and Wales pending the outcome of the current review?

Alison Dixon is an occupational therapist.


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