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Women with Disabilities: Barriers and Facilitators to Accessing ...

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WOMEN WITH DISABILITIES: BARRIERS AND FACILITATORS TO ACCESSING SERVICES DURING PREGNANCY,CHILDBIRTH AND EARLY MOTHERHOODSchool of Nursing <strong>and</strong> Midwifery, Trinity College DublinBr<strong>and</strong>on, 1957a, 1957b). This realisation did not, however, bring about asignificantly changed attitude <strong>to</strong>wards women <strong>with</strong> intellectual disability(Abramson et al, 1988), but rather refocused the attention on efforts <strong>and</strong>strategies <strong>to</strong> deny their parenting capability. Thus, Espe-Sherwindt <strong>and</strong> Crable(1993) argue that several myths developed around the reality:• That the children of intellectually disabled parents will be themselvesintellectually disabled;• That intellectually disabled parents will have more children than, onaverage, the norm;• That intellectually disabled parents provide inadequate parenting;• That parents <strong>with</strong> intellectual difficulties cannot learn adequate parentingskills.It is likely that these issues served <strong>to</strong> re-instil the fear that was inherent ineugenic thought (as is clear from the first 2 statements), whilst introducing afurther concern regarding the security of children born <strong>to</strong> persons <strong>with</strong>intellectual disability. Whereas the first <strong>and</strong> second issues were quicklydisproved (Br<strong>and</strong>on, 1957a; Reed <strong>and</strong> Reed, 1965; Gillberg <strong>and</strong> Geijer-Karlsson, 1983; Koller et al, 1988), fears regarding the adequacy of parents <strong>with</strong>intellectual disabilities remained, <strong>and</strong> probably still remain, in question(Fantuzzo et al, 1986).It is clear from the literature that many such people are striving <strong>to</strong> provide fortheir children, often in very difficult situations, <strong>and</strong> a significant number of theseparents are mothers, parenting alone following either ab<strong>and</strong>onment or sexualassault. A critical review of the literature found that the effects of sexualviolence against women <strong>with</strong> intellectual disability appeared <strong>to</strong> be comparable<strong>to</strong> those experienced by similarly traumatised women in the general population.Aggression <strong>and</strong> self-injury were sometimes exhibited <strong>and</strong> psychiatric symp<strong>to</strong>msincluded depression, anxiety <strong>and</strong> indica<strong>to</strong>rs of traumatic stress reaction(Sequeira <strong>and</strong> Hollins, 2003). Struggling <strong>with</strong> the after-effects of such trauma45

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