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Examples of good practice in autism service delivery Richard Ibbotson – National Director Scotland Catherine Steedman – Deputy Director Scotland 1. Development of a personalised communication tool 2. Support to an individual with co-morbid mental health issues 3. Providing a One Stop Shop service in a rural area (Highlands) What is good practice in autism service delivery ? Autism Initiatives’ 5 point star – a framework for understanding autism 5 principles of good practice: We need a shared understanding of the person with autism and a partnership approach that demonstrates that we have power with not power over the person with autism, to develop a range of personalised approaches. We use these personalised approaches to support the person with autism to develop strategies from/through which they acquire and use the skills they need which in turn supports them to become an independent and valued citizen. 18,132 Steven COSPA 18,557  Autism  Learning Difficulties  Anxiety  ‘Complex needs’ How these affected Steven  Limited choice making  No control over daily life  No control over major life decisions  Negative reputation Difficulties  Communication challenges  Complex family involvement  Inconsistent expectations  Poor understanding of motivations ‘ what makes Steven tick’ What we did – the good practice  Fundamental review of communication  Development of a communication system that works for him (key ring picture system)  Focus on what makes Steven feel safe – what does he understand about his environment and the people around him  Move away from a behavioural focus  Fill life with positive and successful experiences What we did – the good practice 18,132 James COSPA 18,557  Aspergers syndrome  Anxiety disorder  Obsessive compulsive disorder How these affected James  He rarely went out  Echolalia increased  Quality of communication decreased  Extremely poor quality of life  Increased likelihood of severe mental illness  Unhappiness Difficulties  No family involvement  Other people’s expectations  James’ expectations  He needed to engage with psychiatry and health professionals What we did – the good practice  Key was a named worker, who co-ordinated communications and took the pressure away from James  Person-centred working and planning  Trust, predictability, honesty, power-with  Used his preferred communication - visual aids, notes, knocking signals, through doors, social stories and emails.  Adapted our communication to support James to have choices and express his opinions  Liaising with all health and social work professionals  Time to build resilience  A ‘safety net’  Staff profiles sent before meetings  Telephone appointments  Shared understanding of remit with other agencies  Meetings at his house, meetings at the GP surgery Highlands One Stop Shop: rural support The One Stop Shop  A One Stop Shop, not because it is one place you go to, but because we can provide everything you need in a flexible, person-centred way  We provide the widest range of services to autistic people, their families and professionals working for autistic people  Individual level – workshops to learn from others, social opportunities, counselling-type service, pre diagnostic and post diagnostic work, preventative services  Community level – training, education, advice, weaved throughout local autism strategies in the areas we work  Edinburgh, Perth and Highlands Rural support – capacity building  Analysing the statistics  Feedback from our evaluations  Skye, Caithness, Lochaber drop-ins  Working with schools – Fort William  Late diagnosis group – at a distance Bringing the OSS to the rural area  Local focus groups – what is wanted  Mapping – what’s already around  Getting the environment right Monthly meet-ups  Drop in - table tennis, gaming, scrabble, cards, playing with others  1:1 during the drop-in times  1:1’s in and around the area  Very flexible – meet someone on the way there and someone on the way back! Take people to the drop-in venue  Meet with employers and other agencies while there  Unexpected outcome – parent support group  Skye - 19  Caithness – 20  Lochaber - 11 Working in and with schools  Two school teachers working in Fort William – pre and post diagnostic work  Visit schools, training support teachers, helping the autistic children to define autism  Post diagnostic work – they had nothing  Head in Kinlochleven – great! Wants to help, recognises she and her team need to know more  Replication – Dingwall next Distance learning: late diagnosis work  Autism Strategy Development funding  Remote Late Diagnosis group  10-week Late Diagnosis group to rural areas  Sensory integration; relationships; employment; education; childhood; mental health; lifestyle; communication; the brain  Isle of Lewis What next  Wider areas  Increased use of IT  But … we need funding to continue!