1. Forms of resistance in people with severe and profound intellectual disabilities
- Author
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Clare Nicholson, Steven D. Stagg, and W. Mick L. Finlay
- Subjects
030506 rehabilitation ,050101 languages & linguistics ,Health (social science) ,Profound intellectual disabilities ,Communication ,Health Policy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Public policy ,Resistance (psychoanalysis) ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Nonverbal communication ,Self-determination ,Conversation analysis ,Intellectual Disability ,Ethnography ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,0305 other medical science ,Empowerment ,Psychology ,Anthropology, Cultural ,media_common - Abstract
Government policy in the UK emphasises that people with intellectual disabilities should have the opportunity to make choices and exert control over their own lives as much as possible. The ability of a person to resist activities and offers is therefore important, particularly for people with severe and profound intellectual disabilities, who are likely to have language impairments and need to communicate their choices non-verbally. Video and ethnographic data were collected from two services for people with severe and profound intellectual disabilities. Examples of resistance by people with severe and profound intellectual disabilities and responses to that resistance by support workers, were collected and examined using conversation analysis and ethnographic description. A range of non-verbal resistance behaviours are described, and the difficulty for support workers in identifying resistance when behaviour is ambiguous is discussed. The importance of understanding these behaviours as examples of decision-making is stressed.
- Published
- 2021
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