Managing transitions: Support for individuals at key points of change
Alison Petch
Abstract
Everyone will experience a number of transitions throughout their life. Many of these will be positive, others may present challenges. This book addresses significant transitions relevant to policy and practice, covering key transition points in social care from childhood to old age. Drawing on the best-available research evidence, it highlights issues common to all experiencing transition, as well as the dilemmas specific to particular situations. Individual chapters explore what we know about how transition is experienced by young people leaving care and by those with learning disabilities a ... More
Everyone will experience a number of transitions throughout their life. Many of these will be positive, others may present challenges. This book addresses significant transitions relevant to policy and practice, covering key transition points in social care from childhood to old age. Drawing on the best-available research evidence, it highlights issues common to all experiencing transition, as well as the dilemmas specific to particular situations. Individual chapters explore what we know about how transition is experienced by young people leaving care and by those with learning disabilities and mental-health problems. For young people seeking asylum, there are multiple transitions: of age, of country, and of culture. Further contributions address the current transformation from service provision to self-directed support, the major transition for older people who move to supported living, and the enduring challenges that surround the transition from hospital to community. The practice orientation of the book is reinforced by the inclusion of evidence-based practice guidance for each of the areas addressed and a strong emphasis throughout on the implications for practice development.
Keywords:
transitions,
social care,
childhood,
old age,
dilemmas,
learning disabilities,
leaving care,
mental health,
asylum,
service provision
Bibliographic Information
Print publication date: 2009 |
Print ISBN-13: 9781847421883 |
Published to Policy Press Scholarship Online: March 2012 |
DOI:10.1332/policypress/9781847421883.001.0001 |