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Social Work with Autistic People

Essential Knowledge, Skills and the Law for Working with Children and Adults

Yo Dunn Alex Ruck Ruck Keene Ruth Allen

$54.99

Paperback

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English
Jessica Kingsley Publishers
21 September 2020
This book will help social workers and practitioners to find achievable solutions to support autistic people - including those with complex needs - to live fulfilling lives in their communities.

Far too many autistic people are currently in inappropriate institutional placements, putting their basic human rights at risk and experiencing a poor quality of life. Good quality support for autistic people is achievable, even in a social care system under pressure. This book will help practitioners to develop high quality community support to facilitate discharges and prevent

admissions, by providing them with effective, practical strategies to communicate with and more effectively support autistic people right across the spectrum.

Common assumptions and beliefs are challenged, including the idea that 'behaviours' are an inevitable part of autism, and practical approaches are offered to promote autonomy, respect for human rights and empathy with autistic perspectives as a basis for preventing distressed behaviour. This will enable practitioners to support and empower all autistic people to achieve a good quality of life in their communities.
By:  
Foreword by:   ,
Imprint:   Jessica Kingsley Publishers
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 226mm,  Width: 150mm,  Spine: 18mm
Weight:   380g
ISBN:   9781785920790
ISBN 10:   1785920790
Pages:   256
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Primary ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Foreword Acknowledgements 1. Where does autism fit from a social work perspective? 1.1 Autism in the context of social work 1.2 Why do I need to do anything differently for autism? 1.3 Autism and co-occurring conditions 1.4 Undiagnosed autism 1.5 How can this book help social workers? 2. Social care assessment and autism 2.1 Before the assessment 2.2 During the assessment 2.3 Chapter summary and key points 3. Social care eligibility and autism 3.1 Assumptions 3.2 Thresholds or barriers? 3.3 Autistic Needs in Daily Living 3.4 Chapter summary and key points 4. Person-centred care planning in autism 4.1 Person-centred approaches, needs-led planning and the wider context 4.2 What does good care look like? - Goals 4.3 What does good care look like? - A framework 4.4 Chapter summary and key points 5. Life stages, aging and transition planning 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Autism and attachment difficulties 5.3 Human development and developmental delay in autism 5.4 Autistic identity development 5.5 Managing transitions 5.6 Chapter summary and key points 6. Assessing mental capacity and autism 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Who does the assessment? 6.3 Assumptions 6.4 Autistic people and the development of decision-making skills 6.5 Providing all relevant information 6.6 Types of decision 6.7 Timing 6.8 The functional test 6.9 Chapter summary and key points 7. Supporting decision making in autism 7.1 Introduction 7.2 Lack of experience 7.3 Adapting communication 7.4 Providing information 7.5 Weighing information and making a decision 7.6 Communicating and executing the decision 7.7 Chapter summary and key points 8. Safeguarding and Autism 8.1 How big is the risk? 8.2 Types of abuse 8.3 Prevention 8.4 Safeguarding enquiries 8.5 Chapter summary and key points 9. Behaviour which may challenge 9.1 Overload: fight, freeze or flight 9.2 Managing behaviour: reaction 9.3 Managing behaviour: prevention 9.4 The wider context: preventing the breakdown of community placements and ending the inappropriate use of inpatient settings 9.5 Crisis planning 9.6 Chapter summary and key points References

Yo Dunn is an independent trainer and consultant who works across the public sector, specialising in autism and law. She creates and delivers high level training for social workers on the legal frameworks of social care, safeguarding and autism for a variety of clients, including many English local authorities.

Reviews for Social Work with Autistic People: Essential Knowledge, Skills and the Law for Working with Children and Adults

It has been a pleasure and privilege to read this textbook. A privilege because it is very evident that this is a subject in which Yo feels passionate and extraordinarily knowledgeable and insightful. A text that, in my view as an educator in social work, more than fills a gap. In my experience, Yo is right to say that social work and working with autistic people is an area that is at best only briefly discussed in pre-qualifying social work. The structure and content of the book are easy to follow and provides a range of very powerful stages, observations, legal literacy and case studies, for all of us who are continuously wishing to improve and develop our social work practice to pause and critically reflect, not just on our individual practice but how and in what way organisations and society at large work with autistic people. I commend this book to all social workers, be they students, child & family, adult or in education, and I will certainly be drawing upon the content to support my teaching and learning responsibilities. -- Paul Hollingdale, Senior Lecturer, Division of Social Care and Counselling, University of Huddersfield This book is wise, thoughtful, and above all practical. Whilst its primary audience may well indeed be social workers, it should equally be compulsory reading for lawyers, who experience has taught require all the help that they can get responding to the needs of persons with autism. -- Alex Ruck Keene, Barrister, 39 Essex Chambers and Visiting Lecturer, King’s College London This book is written in an accessible and engaging way by an author who really knows her stuff, from the practical application of the law to the deep understanding of what it's really like to be an autistic person living in the world today. This is not like other texts on autism; it gives an insight that is rarely seen, I recommend that everyone with an interest in autism reads this book. -- Kabie Brook, Autistic activist, co-founder of Autism Rights Group Highland, and National Autistic Taskforce Board Member


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