In 2016, the Department of Health in England announced that it would pilot the role of Named Social Worker. We chose to be part of the pilot because we regularly witness too many people's lives being defined by restrictions imposed by professionals. Erroneous associations between the concepts of risk and danger have become the norm in how learning disabled people's decision-making is perceived and managed. However, we believe social workers educated in the social model of disability and grounded more generally in disability studies offer an alternative perspective. The pilot is an opportunity to test our hypothesis that social work practice rooted in social model thinking can successfully challenge oppressive practice and disabling barriers, thus providing the opportunity for social workers to genuinely be 'servants not masters' in the lives of disabled people.
Significant progress has been made since the 1980s in supporting adults with learning disability to live independent lives in the community. In 2012, the Department of Health in England announced the latest policy initiative to further invest in community support for people with learning disabilities, Transforming Care. Building the right community supported living setting for people does not in isolation provide for a comprehensive strategy towards achieving a paradigm shift in how people with learning disabilities experience their full right to inclusion in their communities. We undertook a practice inquiry into the quality of life experienced by people with learning disabilities. Social workers chose the focus of the inquiry to be on people's evening routines to answer the questionwere people living in the community experiencing independence or did institutional routines define their lives. The findings were that 69% of people with a learning disability were either in bed or were ready for bed. There was evidence that institutionalised routines existed in the settings with an association between an early evening meal time and the person being ready for or in bed (p=0.0001 at Time 1 and p=0.051 at Time 2). Implications for social work practice are discussed. Care Quality Commission (2015b). Guidance for providers on meeting the fundamental standards and on CQC's enforcement power. [Online].
Purpose
Participation of people with learning disabilities in the United Kingdom (UK) Parliamentary Elections has previously been found to be lower than that of non-learning disabled peers. This paper aims to consider whether an intervention to support the right to take part in democratic and political life may result in increased participation rates.
Design/methodology/approach
Data were gathered by social workers from 135 learning disabled people about their voter registration and voting in the May 2019 UK local government election. Social workers subsequently ran a promote the vote campaign with this cohort and gathered the same data in respect of the December 2019 UK Parliamentary Election.
Findings
Following the campaign, there were statistically significant increases in both the proportion of people who registered to vote and in the proportion who voted.
Originality/value
People with learning disabilities are more likely to vote if made aware of their rights and supported to do so.
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