2021): Understanding the possibilities and limitations of assistive technology in health and welfare services for people with intellectual disabilities, staff perspectives, Disability and Rehabilitation: Assistive Technology,
Aims: This article aims to shed light on the prevalence of problem substance use in individuals with borderline or mild intellectual disability in Norway, the extent to which their problem use warrants multidisciplinary specialist substance treatment (MST) and whether they receive such treatment at present. Method: We employed a scoping review of international and Norwegian literature and made additional informal literature searches. Results: The prevalence of substance use problems among people with intellectual disability in Norway is uncertain. In spite of representing problem complexity of the kind that warrants MST and the entitlement of all population
A quantitative cross-sectional design was used to systematically examine data derived from the municipality's coercive decision documents. The study included coercive decisions for people with intellectual disabilities (IDs) (n = 120) from central Norway over a period of one year (2020). The decisions were separated between not altered and altered to less intrusive types.
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