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The Experiences of Staff who Support People With Intellectual Disabilities

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

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The Experiences of Staff who Support People With Intellectual Disabilities. / D'Sa, Rachel.
Lancaster University, 2022. 215 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Harvard

APA

D'Sa, R. (2022). The Experiences of Staff who Support People With Intellectual Disabilities. [Doctoral Thesis, Lancaster University]. Lancaster University. https://doi.org/10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1751

Vancouver

D'Sa R. The Experiences of Staff who Support People With Intellectual Disabilities. Lancaster University, 2022. 215 p. doi: 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1751

Author

D'Sa, Rachel. / The Experiences of Staff who Support People With Intellectual Disabilities. Lancaster University, 2022. 215 p.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{2c9d1bea6f7d496a83eecb27fe2958a1,
title = "The Experiences of Staff who Support People With Intellectual Disabilities",
abstract = "This thesis offers a contribution to the research on staff who support people with intellectual disabilities. The first section is a systematic review of studies which have measured the psychological construct of Emotional Intelligence (EI), of staff in services for people with intellectual disabilities. Six academic databases were searched and 15 empirical studies were identified for inclusion. The results gave an indication that staff EI may relate to aspects of their wellbeing, but the heterogeneity and variable quality across studies limitedthe extent to which meaningful conclusions could be drawn. There was minimal evidence on the effects of training which aims to improve staff EI, and a notable lack of investigation into how staff EI relates to service-user outcomes. The issues which future research needs to address, in order to determine if EI is a useful target for service development, are discussed.The second section describes a qualitative research project, which explored theexperiences of working relationships for staff who provide direct support to adults with intellectual disabilities. Six support workers, from supported living services in England, participated in semi-structured interviews, about their relationships with service-users and colleagues. An interpretative henomenological analysis was conducted, from which six interconnected themes emerged: (A) The essence of good relationships; (B) A trusting relationship as the vehicle for meeting service-users{\textquoteright} needs; (C) Belonging to the supportteam; (D) The organisational context of relationships; (E) The social context of relationships; (F) “A fine balancing act”. The paper discusses how these findings build on existing research on the wellbeing of direct care staff, along with potential implications for service providers. The third section is a critical appraisal which considers links between the literature review and research paper findings, discusses some future research directions which arise, and explores personal reflections on conducting the research project.",
author = "Rachel D'Sa",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1751",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - The Experiences of Staff who Support People With Intellectual Disabilities

AU - D'Sa, Rachel

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - This thesis offers a contribution to the research on staff who support people with intellectual disabilities. The first section is a systematic review of studies which have measured the psychological construct of Emotional Intelligence (EI), of staff in services for people with intellectual disabilities. Six academic databases were searched and 15 empirical studies were identified for inclusion. The results gave an indication that staff EI may relate to aspects of their wellbeing, but the heterogeneity and variable quality across studies limitedthe extent to which meaningful conclusions could be drawn. There was minimal evidence on the effects of training which aims to improve staff EI, and a notable lack of investigation into how staff EI relates to service-user outcomes. The issues which future research needs to address, in order to determine if EI is a useful target for service development, are discussed.The second section describes a qualitative research project, which explored theexperiences of working relationships for staff who provide direct support to adults with intellectual disabilities. Six support workers, from supported living services in England, participated in semi-structured interviews, about their relationships with service-users and colleagues. An interpretative henomenological analysis was conducted, from which six interconnected themes emerged: (A) The essence of good relationships; (B) A trusting relationship as the vehicle for meeting service-users’ needs; (C) Belonging to the supportteam; (D) The organisational context of relationships; (E) The social context of relationships; (F) “A fine balancing act”. The paper discusses how these findings build on existing research on the wellbeing of direct care staff, along with potential implications for service providers. The third section is a critical appraisal which considers links between the literature review and research paper findings, discusses some future research directions which arise, and explores personal reflections on conducting the research project.

AB - This thesis offers a contribution to the research on staff who support people with intellectual disabilities. The first section is a systematic review of studies which have measured the psychological construct of Emotional Intelligence (EI), of staff in services for people with intellectual disabilities. Six academic databases were searched and 15 empirical studies were identified for inclusion. The results gave an indication that staff EI may relate to aspects of their wellbeing, but the heterogeneity and variable quality across studies limitedthe extent to which meaningful conclusions could be drawn. There was minimal evidence on the effects of training which aims to improve staff EI, and a notable lack of investigation into how staff EI relates to service-user outcomes. The issues which future research needs to address, in order to determine if EI is a useful target for service development, are discussed.The second section describes a qualitative research project, which explored theexperiences of working relationships for staff who provide direct support to adults with intellectual disabilities. Six support workers, from supported living services in England, participated in semi-structured interviews, about their relationships with service-users and colleagues. An interpretative henomenological analysis was conducted, from which six interconnected themes emerged: (A) The essence of good relationships; (B) A trusting relationship as the vehicle for meeting service-users’ needs; (C) Belonging to the supportteam; (D) The organisational context of relationships; (E) The social context of relationships; (F) “A fine balancing act”. The paper discusses how these findings build on existing research on the wellbeing of direct care staff, along with potential implications for service providers. The third section is a critical appraisal which considers links between the literature review and research paper findings, discusses some future research directions which arise, and explores personal reflections on conducting the research project.

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1751

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1751

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -