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Staff supporting people with intellectual disabilities and mental health problems

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Staff supporting people with intellectual disabilities and mental health problems. / Hatton, Chris; Lobban, Fiona.
Psychiatric and Behavioural Disorders in Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities. ed. / Nick Bouras; Geraldine Holt. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2007. p. 388-399.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Hatton, C & Lobban, F 2007, Staff supporting people with intellectual disabilities and mental health problems. in N Bouras & G Holt (eds), Psychiatric and Behavioural Disorders in Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities. Cambridge University Press (CUP), Cambridge, pp. 388-399. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511543616.025

APA

Hatton, C., & Lobban, F. (2007). Staff supporting people with intellectual disabilities and mental health problems. In N. Bouras, & G. Holt (Eds.), Psychiatric and Behavioural Disorders in Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (pp. 388-399). Cambridge University Press (CUP). https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511543616.025

Vancouver

Hatton C, Lobban F. Staff supporting people with intellectual disabilities and mental health problems. In Bouras N, Holt G, editors, Psychiatric and Behavioural Disorders in Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (CUP). 2007. p. 388-399 doi: 10.1017/CBO9780511543616.025

Author

Hatton, Chris ; Lobban, Fiona. / Staff supporting people with intellectual disabilities and mental health problems. Psychiatric and Behavioural Disorders in Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities. editor / Nick Bouras ; Geraldine Holt. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2007. pp. 388-399

Bibtex

@inbook{54db8771812f4ae983d8ada1da012183,
title = "Staff supporting people with intellectual disabilities and mental health problems",
abstract = "Introduction Staff supporting people with intellectual disabilities (ID) constitute a significant workforce. Although precise statistics are unavailable, there were an estimated 83 000 staff in England working with people with ID in 1999 (Ward, 1999); estimates for the USA in 2000 were well over 600 000 support staff (Hewitt & Lakin, 2001). Given the relatively high proportion of people with ID who also experience mental health problems and the general lack of mental health services for people with ID in the UK and elsewhere (Bailey & Cooper, 1997; Bouras and Holt 2004), a significant proportion of staff will be supporting at least one person with ID and a mental health problem (Quigley et al., 2001). In many countries around the world, services supporting people with ID have shifted from predominantly state-run institutional services to community-based services provided by diverse agencies (Braddock et al., 2001). This shift has led to a workforce characterized by: Large proportions of unqualified staff (75% estimated in England; Ward, 1999; 73% in the USA; Larson et al., 1998); Support staff being predominantly young, inexperienced at supporting people with ID, female, and without dependants (Hatton et al., 1999b; Larson et al., 1998); High staff turnover and vacancy rates. In UK residential services, staff annual turnover rates have been estimated between 18% and 25%, with services reporting vacancy rates of 6%–10% (Ward, 1999). In the USA, staff annual turnover rates are much higher, particularly in independent sector services (e.g. 50%–75% independent sector versus 20%–25% state-run; Larson et al., 2002), with correspondingly high vacancy rates (e.g. 12%; Larson et al., 1998).[…]",
author = "Chris Hatton and Fiona Lobban",
year = "2007",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1017/CBO9780511543616.025",
language = "English",
isbn = "0521608252",
pages = "388--399",
editor = "Nick Bouras and Geraldine Holt",
booktitle = "Psychiatric and Behavioural Disorders in Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press (CUP)",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Staff supporting people with intellectual disabilities and mental health problems

AU - Hatton, Chris

AU - Lobban, Fiona

PY - 2007/1/1

Y1 - 2007/1/1

N2 - Introduction Staff supporting people with intellectual disabilities (ID) constitute a significant workforce. Although precise statistics are unavailable, there were an estimated 83 000 staff in England working with people with ID in 1999 (Ward, 1999); estimates for the USA in 2000 were well over 600 000 support staff (Hewitt & Lakin, 2001). Given the relatively high proportion of people with ID who also experience mental health problems and the general lack of mental health services for people with ID in the UK and elsewhere (Bailey & Cooper, 1997; Bouras and Holt 2004), a significant proportion of staff will be supporting at least one person with ID and a mental health problem (Quigley et al., 2001). In many countries around the world, services supporting people with ID have shifted from predominantly state-run institutional services to community-based services provided by diverse agencies (Braddock et al., 2001). This shift has led to a workforce characterized by: Large proportions of unqualified staff (75% estimated in England; Ward, 1999; 73% in the USA; Larson et al., 1998); Support staff being predominantly young, inexperienced at supporting people with ID, female, and without dependants (Hatton et al., 1999b; Larson et al., 1998); High staff turnover and vacancy rates. In UK residential services, staff annual turnover rates have been estimated between 18% and 25%, with services reporting vacancy rates of 6%–10% (Ward, 1999). In the USA, staff annual turnover rates are much higher, particularly in independent sector services (e.g. 50%–75% independent sector versus 20%–25% state-run; Larson et al., 2002), with correspondingly high vacancy rates (e.g. 12%; Larson et al., 1998).[…]

AB - Introduction Staff supporting people with intellectual disabilities (ID) constitute a significant workforce. Although precise statistics are unavailable, there were an estimated 83 000 staff in England working with people with ID in 1999 (Ward, 1999); estimates for the USA in 2000 were well over 600 000 support staff (Hewitt & Lakin, 2001). Given the relatively high proportion of people with ID who also experience mental health problems and the general lack of mental health services for people with ID in the UK and elsewhere (Bailey & Cooper, 1997; Bouras and Holt 2004), a significant proportion of staff will be supporting at least one person with ID and a mental health problem (Quigley et al., 2001). In many countries around the world, services supporting people with ID have shifted from predominantly state-run institutional services to community-based services provided by diverse agencies (Braddock et al., 2001). This shift has led to a workforce characterized by: Large proportions of unqualified staff (75% estimated in England; Ward, 1999; 73% in the USA; Larson et al., 1998); Support staff being predominantly young, inexperienced at supporting people with ID, female, and without dependants (Hatton et al., 1999b; Larson et al., 1998); High staff turnover and vacancy rates. In UK residential services, staff annual turnover rates have been estimated between 18% and 25%, with services reporting vacancy rates of 6%–10% (Ward, 1999). In the USA, staff annual turnover rates are much higher, particularly in independent sector services (e.g. 50%–75% independent sector versus 20%–25% state-run; Larson et al., 2002), with correspondingly high vacancy rates (e.g. 12%; Larson et al., 1998).[…]

U2 - 10.1017/CBO9780511543616.025

DO - 10.1017/CBO9780511543616.025

M3 - Chapter

AN - SCOPUS:51749094450

SN - 0521608252

SN - 9780521608251

SP - 388

EP - 399

BT - Psychiatric and Behavioural Disorders in Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities

A2 - Bouras, Nick

A2 - Holt, Geraldine

PB - Cambridge University Press (CUP)

CY - Cambridge

ER -