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Residential care for children with intellectual disabilities in the social protection system in Serbia
- Authors:
- BRKIC Miroslav, et al
- Journal article citation:
- European Journal of Social Work, 17(2), 2014, pp.237-251.
- Publisher:
- Taylor and Francis
This paper presents and discusses the characteristics of the social protection of children with intellectual disabilities who are placed in children's homes in Serbia. It draws on a survey that covered the entire population—586 users in all five institutions for children with intellectual disabilities who resided there in 2009. The analysis shows the heterogeneity of users in relation to age and degree of intellectual disability, their long-term stay in homes, the inadequate structural and functional standards, and insufficient health care. Residential care becomes the most common form of permanent rather than temporary care. These findings suggest the need for a number of strategies to be adopted, and the paper concludes by outlining potential ways forward. (Publisher abstract)
Institutions remain dumping grounds for forgotten people
- Author:
- TAVANIER Yana Buhrer
- Journal article citation:
- Tizard Learning Disability Review, 15(2), April 2010, pp.4-14.
- Publisher:
- Emerald
This article highlights a study conducted undercover in institutions for adults with intellectual and mental health disabilities in Bulgaria, Romania and Serbia. It found evidence of human rights abuses, inhuman and degrading treatment, and severe neglect. The author suggests that reform is coming too slowly to institutions for adults with intellectual and mental health disabilities in these countries, where chronic neglect, filthy conditions, and the use of physical restraints and high-dosage drugs to control behaviour remain routine. The author describes, from a personal perspective, many of the failings in the care system with the three countries, and highlights how much of the abuse is conducted behind closed doors, in an effort to hide the true extent of the problem – which, if disclosed, may have ramifications for EU grants to these countries.