Interconnections Worldwide

Working internationally to share information, help build knowledge and support teamwork around babies, children and young people who are disabled, marginalised or vulnerable

The home of Team Around the Child (TAC) and the Multiagency Keyworker

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New research alerts from HealthMatters Community Academic Partnership - Below are four new research alerts for the MAT TAC Bulletin Update:

Research_Alerts1. One of the main findings was that people with ID, their carers and parents were unaware of the benefits of eye testing having believed that their son/daughter did not need glasses as they could not read.Others felt their son/daughter would not be able to read the letters in the eye examination so felt it would have been a waste of time. For some people with ID they often relied on others to make their appointments so had little knowledge of how to do this.

Please read further here.

2. Many direct-service providers recognized the benefits from exercise, athletic, and recreational activities. They also identified several prerequisite skills that children and youth with I/DD should have to participate meaningfully. These skills included the ability to respond to verbal/physical prompts and follow simple instruction. As well, the respondents endorsed several barriers to conducting these activities including fear of injury and safety concerns.

Please read further here.

3. The findings indicate that Health Care Support Workers (HCSWs) invest a great deal of their time on emotional and social support as well as on assisting in the provision of personal care. They are also involved in providing care for the dying, respite care for family members and offer domestic support. The findings suggest three challenges in the HCSWs role: emotional attachment, role ambiguity, and inadequate training. Support factors such as informal peer grief-support groups, sense of cohesiveness among HCSWs and task orientation enabled HCSWs to overcome these challenges.

Please read further here.

4. We designed a health self-advocacy curriculum that taught people with ID to recognize their health rights, such as having a doctor speak to you in a way that you would understand. Players watched short video clips and had to say whether the person's health right were being violated and what the person could do about it. The participants who played the game had higher scores on self-advocacy measures and actual use of self-advocacy skills than the participants who did not play the game.

Please read further here

HealthMatters Alerts: www.HealthMattersProgram.org

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