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Original Articles

Quality of Life for People with Learning Difficulties Moving to Community Homes

, &
Pages 137-152 | Published online: 23 Feb 2007
 

ABSTRACT

Research concerning people with learning difficulties who have left institutions has typically investigated how well people ‘adapt’ to life in the community, and has often ignored users' own perceptions of the changes in their quality of life resulting from the move. In this study, eight people with learning difficulties who moved from a hospital and seven people who moved from parental homes to live in staffed homes in the community were interviewed. Choice, privacy, social life and relationships with their parents and staff emerged as important factors in participants' perception of their quality of life. Their relationships with their parents were found to be close, and in some cases their parents were overprotective. Staff were perceived in some cases as too controlling and in others as providing too little support. The findings indicate that people with learning difficulties moving to community residences have aspirations which encompass far more than a wish to adapt to life in the community, and their relationships with family and staff are a central factor in achieving such aspirations.

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