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      Education creates comfort and challenges stigma towards children with intellectual disabilities.

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          Abstract

          Children with intellectual disabilities (IDs) are frequent users of the healthcare system, yet nurses report they receive little education regarding specialized medical, social and relational needs of this population. Therefore, parents take on a greater burden of care while their child is in hospital than do parents of typically developing children. This article reports findings from a qualitative study that used feminist poststructuralism to examine the hospital experiences of eight children with IDs, 17 mothers and 12 nurses. Nurses and mothers reported a lack of knowledge and education regarding the healthcare of children with ID and identified a need for more education. Participants noted that physical care of children with ID was prioritized as more important than communication and relationships. This unintentional prioritization was socially and institutionally constructed through stigma and stereotypes about people with IDs. Nurses and parents offered suggestions to access and increase ID education for healthcare professionals.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Intellect Disabil
          Journal of intellectual disabilities : JOID
          SAGE Publications
          1744-6309
          1744-6295
          Mar 2018
          : 22
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Glenrose Rehabilitation Hospital, Canada.
          [2 ] Dalhousie University, Canada.
          Article
          1744629516667892
          10.1177/1744629516667892
          27645205
          321fb975-58e9-4d65-ae34-f31e5a476139
          History

          intellectual disabilities,nursing education,paediatric healthcare,parental involvement

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