Working systemically with individuals with an intellectual disability to promote empowerment

Erin M Beal
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Abstract

■This article shows how society can in lots of ways oppress individuals who have a diagnosis of a learning disability.■This is an important topic to think and talk about if we want to change the ways that people with a learning disability are treated and make sure they have more person-centred support.■The person is not the ‘problem’ and it is not their disability that takes away their power. Instead, it is the culture that we live in that does not value them enough and this needs to change.■Good practice recommendations include supporting families and teams with psychoeducation, and indirect work with teams to change the way we view people with a learning disability and the mental health problems they may have.Individuals with an Intellectual Disability (ID) have struggled to have their psychological needs met throughout history due to the deficit language used by society, which has reduced their power. This article highlights how this group has been stigmatised and the negative implications that this has for their psychological wellbeing using a systemic lens. It outlines good practice recommendations using systematic ways of working to provide individuals with an ID and those that support them a more person-centred form of care. These recommendations utilise a strengths-based approach that seeks to highlight stories of ability, resilience, and merit.
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有系统地与智障人士合作,促进赋权
■这篇文章展示了社会如何在很多方面压迫那些被诊断为学习障碍的人。■如果我们想改变对待学习障碍患者的方式,并确保他们得到更多以人为本的支持,这是一个值得思考和讨论的重要话题。这个人不是“问题”,也不是他们的残疾剥夺了他们的权力。相反,是我们生活的文化对他们不够重视,这需要改变。■良好的实践建议包括支持家庭和团队进行心理教育,并与团队间接合作,以改变我们对有学习障碍的人及其可能存在的心理健康问题的看法。由于社会使用的缺陷语言削弱了智障人士的权力,他们一直在努力满足他们的心理需求。这篇文章强调了这个群体是如何被污名化的,以及这对他们的心理健康产生的负面影响。它概述了使用系统的工作方式为个人提供身份证的良好做法建议,以及那些支持他们更以人为本的护理形式的建议。这些建议采用基于优势的方法,力求突出能力、适应力和优点的故事。
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