In my last blogpost I talked about what the research
evidence does and doesn’t say about the lives of people with learning disabilities
living in different kinds of places. I also talked about how the research
evidence hasn’t kept pace with the corporatized world of speculative 48-bed ‘supported
living’ establishments and other such ‘developments’.
[Odilon Redon, 1916, White vase with flowers]
[Odilon Redon, 1916, White vase with flowers]
I’ve been hearing quite a lot about these sorts of ‘supported
living’ arrangements, what people’s lives are like within them, and what is
being done to people to cut costs in the disingenuous names of ‘improving
people’s quality of life’ and ‘reducing their dependence’. I’ve also been
thinking about how Hillingdon Council have assessed Steven Neary as being subject to a ‘deprivation of liberty’ because he is consistently supported to go about
his daily life.
Historically, one very powerful prism that has been used to
understand what services are doing to people is institutionalisation. This is
derived from the work of sociologist Erving Goffman in the USA, who in his 1961
book Asylums defined a total institution as “A place of residence and work
where a large number of like-situated individuals, cut off from wider society
for an appreciable period of time, together lead an enclosed, formally
administered round of life”. Features of institutional routines include a
complete breakdown of usual distinctions between work, play and sleep, so that
all these things happen under one roof under a single authority; block
treatment of residents; routines which act to depersonalise residents; rigid
institutional routines; and maintaining a social distance between residents and
staff.
In the UK in the 1980s and the 1990s quite a lot of research
begun by Norma Raynes and colleagues investigated the extent to which people in
long-stay institutions, and various community-based types of housing for people
with learning disabilities, were subject to these institutional routines.
Although long-stay institutions were always (unsurprisingly) institutional, and
smaller, community-based housing services were on average less institutional,
being in a small supported living service did not guarantee that your life
wouldn’t be constrained by the kind of institutional routines listed above.
Looking at the circumstances people are in now, I think
there’s a lot to still be taken from the institutionalisation way of thinking
about things, but that applying it wholesale allows service providers and
commissioners to wheedle their way out of the consequences of what they’re
doing to people (‘Of course we don’t make everyone have a bath at the same time
– people have choice about that’ etc etc).
Instead I’d like to propose that what we’re talking about here are forms of restraint. We know people with learning disabilities (both inside and outside inpatient units) can be subject to mechanical restraint (being placed in clothing, chairs etc that restrict people’s movement), physical restraint (being restrained by other people), seclusion (being locked in a room on your own), and chemical restraint (being prescribed unnecessary antipsychotics as a method of sedation). I think we can also talk about restraints on freedom. These might not be acknowledged as such, but these restraints can be seen in their impact on people’s lives. These restraints on freedom took certain forms in big institutional services, but very similar restraints on freedom are cropping up in new guises for people with learning disabilities today.
Instead I’d like to propose that what we’re talking about here are forms of restraint. We know people with learning disabilities (both inside and outside inpatient units) can be subject to mechanical restraint (being placed in clothing, chairs etc that restrict people’s movement), physical restraint (being restrained by other people), seclusion (being locked in a room on your own), and chemical restraint (being prescribed unnecessary antipsychotics as a method of sedation). I think we can also talk about restraints on freedom. These might not be acknowledged as such, but these restraints can be seen in their impact on people’s lives. These restraints on freedom took certain forms in big institutional services, but very similar restraints on freedom are cropping up in new guises for people with learning disabilities today.
For example, Goffman talked about people in institutions living
their lives under one authority. If a person with learning disabilities is in a
‘supported living’ service where the housing and support provider organisations
happen to be the same or are closely linked, in practice this person is living
their life under one authority. How easy would it be for this person to move
house, or sack the organisation supporting them to find someone better? And if
this person doesn’t have a job (highly likely), has very little money to spend, and gets very little support to
do anything during the day that they want to do, these restraints add up to
something possibly worse in some ways than an institution – from work, play and
sleep under one authority to no work and precious little play, leaving a person
effectively trapped in their home with nothing to do. A restraint on freedom.
Goffman also talked about institutions involving large
numbers of like-situated individuals under one roof. These aren’t people
choosing to live together under one roof because of shared liking, interests or
ideals. They are people made to live under one roof due to decisions made by an
external authority, on the basis of a bureaucratically defined ‘need’. Again, a
48-bedded ‘supported living’ complex, no matter how bijou, is doing exactly
this, imposing severe restraints on people’s freedom to determine where they
live and who they live with in living spaces that are private. However, these restraints
can also apply in much smaller places too, if people have no say in which neighbourhood, village, town or city they live in, the style of their home, and whether
they want to share with anyone, on what terms, and who the anyone is.
In terms of restraints on freedom described as institutional routines when people lived in big institutions, no doubt there would be
strenuous objections from service providers and commissioners if I were to suggest
that people with learning disabilities are subject to block treatment and rigid
routines, although initiatives like the excellent Big Bed Time Audit done in
Hertfordshire and Calderdale show that block treatment is alive and kicking in
services for people with learning disabilities (soon to be published, but some tweets on it can be found here).
But what if people with learning disabilities in a supported living complex all have to be in their flatlets/rooms at a particular time at night? What if everyone supported by a particular service provider, across many different houses, all have to do the same 'work experience'? What if everyone with learning disabilities has to use their 'personal budget' in the form of a pre-payment card, only usable with a restricted set of 'approved' services? These are restraints on freedom in the form of block treatment, even if they are distributed across all the services provided by a particular organisation or across everyone living in a particular local authority.
The same is the case with rigidity of routines. What if people only get any support to go out and do stuff at fixed hours and days of the week, meaning that people have to leave a gig at 9pm (see Stay Up Late’s recent survey on this), or they don’t get to see a film at the cinema they want to because a support worker isn’t available when the film’s on? What if people get a home visit involving personal care, at a particular time, that isn’t long enough to get people feeling like they’re ready for action? For me, these are restraints on freedom in the form of being subject to rigid routines imposed by others for bureaucratic convenience, in new forms that are cloaked and officially deniable.
But what if people with learning disabilities in a supported living complex all have to be in their flatlets/rooms at a particular time at night? What if everyone supported by a particular service provider, across many different houses, all have to do the same 'work experience'? What if everyone with learning disabilities has to use their 'personal budget' in the form of a pre-payment card, only usable with a restricted set of 'approved' services? These are restraints on freedom in the form of block treatment, even if they are distributed across all the services provided by a particular organisation or across everyone living in a particular local authority.
The same is the case with rigidity of routines. What if people only get any support to go out and do stuff at fixed hours and days of the week, meaning that people have to leave a gig at 9pm (see Stay Up Late’s recent survey on this), or they don’t get to see a film at the cinema they want to because a support worker isn’t available when the film’s on? What if people get a home visit involving personal care, at a particular time, that isn’t long enough to get people feeling like they’re ready for action? For me, these are restraints on freedom in the form of being subject to rigid routines imposed by others for bureaucratic convenience, in new forms that are cloaked and officially deniable.
Perhaps most frightening to me is the way that services are
increasingly being set up in ways that depersonalise people with learning
disabilities and set up an ever increasing social distance between people with
learning disabilities and others supposed to be there to support them. The role
of people as supporters is being systematically eroded and being replaced by
various forms of remote surveillance in the names of assistive technology or
telecare.
Look at the ‘Just Checking’ website for one example of such
technology being used in an increasing number of ‘supported housing’ services
across England – there are many others too. Sleep-in staff are being replaced
by ‘Just Checking’ technology, which as far as I can tell records whether
people are opening or closing doors at night or are getting out of bed, with
one Just Checking member of staff remotely keeping an eye on all this
information from multiple houses. Quite what pattern of door opening and
closing would merit an intervention, what this intervention would be, and what
would happen if two people in different houses opened their doors
inappropriately simultaneously, is unclear. As far as I can tell, I can’t see any
evidence presented in the case studies on the website that people with learning
disabilities prefer Just Checking to being able to talk to someone, or that it
improves the lives of people with learning disabilities in any tangible way.
There is lots of detailed evidence on cost savings, however. The front page of
the site sets up the extreme depersonalisation and social distance involved –
your options are ‘For A Loved One’ or ‘For Care Professionals’ – a ‘For You’
option doesn’t exist.
And how does a person with learning disabilities ask for
help, or have someone to chat to if they’re worried about something? How do
people have secure, ongoing relationships with people supporting them, to find
out shared interests, do things together, grow and develop as people? To me this increasing social distance and depersonalisation are severe restraints on people’s lives, by not providing the human
contact and respect that everyone needs to make the most of their lives.
Taking these together, I was thinking about Mark and Steven
Neary, and how Hillingdon has decided that Steven’s excellent support to live
the life he wants and to support him in growing and developing as a person
constitutes a deprivation of liberty. Like Mark, I think it’s the exact
opposite. Taking away Steven’s home, forcing him into some ‘supported living’
service with people he doesn’t know, taking away the people who know and care
about him, would be subjecting him to severe restraints on his freedom.
Wherever people are living, I think a crucial test for any
organisation commissioning or providing support is the extent to which their
practices are acting as restraints on people’s freedom, in the ways I've tried to describe above and in other ways too. These restraints need to be broken just as much as other forms of restraint. If people were not being subject to such restraints, you would expect to see variation and diversity in how a population of people with learning disabilities are living their lives, as they become the authors of their lives rather than having the book of their lives written by someone else. Sounds good to me.