Investing in Advocacy for Parents with Learning Disabilities: What is the Economic Argument?
Bauer A, Wistow G, Dixon J, et al
British Journal of Learning Disabilities, 43, 66-74.
2014
Project ID (Internal) | 62 |
---|---|
Project Status | completed |
Full Reference (text) | Bauer A, Wistow G, Dixon J et al (2014) Investing in Advocacy for Parents with Learning Disabilities: What is the Economic Argument? British Journal of Learning Disabilities. 43:66-74. [The abstract can be accessed here] |
Full Reference (URL) | https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/bld.12089 |
Summary / Abstract | Advocacy services may be called upon at the beginning of, or in the course of, child safeguarding processes. Without this support, parents with learning disabilities often find it difficult to participate effectively. We worked with four advocacy services, which together provided information on seventeen case studies. Costs of service provision were calculated for each case based on budget and activity information. Economic consequences of reduced child safeguarding activities were derived for cases in which there was evidence that the involvement of advocacy had changed the outcome. Incremental costs were calculated by comparing this against a vignette, developed from previous research, of a typical child safeguarding process that ends with the child being removed from the parental home. |
Publication Title | Investing in Advocacy for Parents with Learning Disabilities: What is the Economic Argument? |
Author(s) | Bauer A, Wistow G, Dixon J, et al |
Publication Details | British Journal of Learning Disabilities, 43, 66-74. |
Publication Year / End of Project | 2014 |
Last Accessed | 03/01/2019 12:00 am |
NIHR School for
Social Care Research