“It’s like torture: Life in Temporary Accommodation for Neurodivergent Children and their Families”
The report, titled ‘It’s like torture: Life in Temporary Accommodation for Neurodivergent Children and their Families’, highlights the findings of a UK-wide call for evidence launched by Dr Rosalie Warnock and Professor Katherine Brickell from King’s College London, through the All Party Parliamentary Group for Households in Temporary Accommodation, and with support from the Shared Health Foundation, Justlife, and Autistica.
There is no official data on how many children living in temporary accommodation are neurodivergent; however, the report estimates that between 25,000 and 120,000 such children are affected in England.
Despite this, neurodivergent children in temporary accommodation have been omitted from Government strategies and policy decisions.
The report calls for a series of recommendations that are targeted at local and national governments to improve the experiences of neurodivergent children living in temporary accommodation.
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We are a clinically-led and evidence-based not-for-profit, passionate about reducing the impact poverty has on health.
Good health should be shared with all. It should not be damaged by social or economic disadvantage.
We exist to mitigate the effects of the inverse care law, adding capacity to systems which are otherwise overwhelmed by complex needs.
We conduct on-the-ground work to identify challenges, pilot solutions, build an evidence base and then work alongside local and national organisations and policy makers to implement system change.
Shared Health supports homeless families locally in Greater Manchester while also working strategically to promote system change regionally and nationally through the APPG for Households in Temporary Accommodation.
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Racism is a public health issue. This has been undeniable since the…
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