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Return to the past?

Letter from Norway. A decade ago, Norway closed its institutions for people with learning difficulties, preferring community support for them. But the institutions might return, writes Gunn Strand Hutchinson.

Thursday 01 August 2002 00:00

Norsk forbund for utviklingshemmede (NFU) is an organisation for people with learning difficulties and their families. Established in 1967, it has around 7,300 members, including 2,000 officers, in 19 counties and 240 local organisations. In Nordland County a little over 1,000 people are classified as having learning difficulties. Out of the 45 municipalities in Nordland, 23 have a local branch of NFU.

NFU promotes improved living conditions for people with learning difficulties. It campaigned for the disestablishment of institutional care at the end of the 1980s. In Nordland, 400 people with learning difficulties were living in county council institutions when deinstitutionalisation started in 1985. The normalisation of services, including housing and home help, has been the guiding principle. People with learning difficulties have the right to live in their own home and receive such help as is needed to manage their daily lives and to take part in society. The last county institution closed in 1991.

After 10 years, this is how things have improved:

- Living conditions have generally got better but not to the standard that other disabled groups and the non-disabled population enjoy.

- People with learning difficulties participate more in society at all levels, but there is still much loneliness.

- There is more scope for individual choices and more individual rights but the defence of personal rights is not good enough.

- More people receive help and more of their needs are met but there are still substantial gaps in the services.

- The attitudes towards people with learning difficulties are changing, with more tolerance and acceptance, but there is still too much "group-thinking" and too little focus on individual needs.

- More people are employed in the care services, but this is still not enough.

- The care services are more professional, but qualified people are too far removed from those who need their skills and knowledge.

A strained municipal economy together with state financial policy has led to the building of sheltered housing in large units, grouping together all people who need assistance in daily living, making it more efficient and cheaper. But help becomes standardised and less focused on individual needs. This tendency is becoming so dominant that NFU has warned of the reintroduction of institutions in new forms.

NFU promotes the following criteria of quality:

- The individual must be able to choose where and how to live.

- The individual must be allowed to decide what kind of help is needed and at what time it shall be given.

- As few people as possible shall work in the home.

Professionals who believe that it is important to empower the people they serve, must learn to co-operate with user organisations. Too often we hear the excuse that "we cannot talk with one organisation because others would be left out". That attitude leads to dialogue with nobody. NFU in Nordland county is now inviting professional organisations to discuss how the above mentioned principles of quality can be introduced.

Gunn Strand Hutchinson is associate professor, department of social sciences, Bodo Regional University.

Background 

- Norway (Norge) covers 325,000 sq km (slightly more than 1.3 times the size of the UK) and has a population of nearly 4.5m.

- Nordland County - one of 19 counties in Norway - provides health and social services including seven general hospitals, a psychiatric hospital, foster homes, drug rehabilitation institutions, child care homes and foster parent service. The health and social services sector is the county's largest and accounts for approximately 50 per cent of the yearly budget.

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