Prain Meredith, McVilly Keith R, Ramcharan Paul
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology University, Victoria, Australia.
J Intellect Dev Disabil. 2012 Mar;37(1):27-34. doi: 10.3109/13668250.2012.647808.
This study aimed to gain greater insight into the perspectives of staff on their interactions with adults with congenital deafblindness in light of the research literature reporting these interactions to be lacking in quality and quantity.
Data from interviews with 8 disability support workers were analysed using the approach described by Charmaz (2006).
Three key themes emerged from the interview data, which support and elaborate on findings of previous studies. These were (1) the construction of client happiness, (2) the rationalisation of client disengagement, and (3) imperatives of the staff role. These findings elucidate the reasons for staff behaviour in their interactions with adults with congenital deafblindness.
The findings suggest the need for staff policy and procedural documents to be explicit about the importance of social interaction between staff and clients.