Hi, I am Peter, a carer of a 43 year old son with Asperger
Syndrome, active member of a voluntary local carer support group STACS, NAS
champion and campaigner “Pushing for Action”.
Campaigning to me is an all embracing word which means a lot
– awareness raising, influencing and working together. It does take time and can be very frustrating
but don't give up!
I have been involved in our local campaign for the provision of a low level preventative and supportive Hub facility for people with Asperger Syndrome and High Functioning Autism for the past 3 years or so.
I have been involved in our local campaign for the provision of a low level preventative and supportive Hub facility for people with Asperger Syndrome and High Functioning Autism for the past 3 years or so.
This has resulted in a trial of a Drop In facility funded by
Telford & Wrekin Council and CCG and is now also under consideration in Shropshire . This
type of support coupled with a wider regional diagnostic and support centre
facility has been identified by us as the greatest area of unmet need and
fulfils many of the adult autism strategy outcomes. It is this type of real support we now need,
not more empty words.
A meeting of the support group |
So, what has made our campaign a success?
1. Work together as strong groupings of committed people
We are a coalition of Shropshire
and Telford Asperger Support Group (STACS - www.stacs-shropshire.org.uk) and
an Asperger self-help group called Autonomy (www.shropshireautonomy.co.uk). Working together to represent lots of
different views gives us all a louder voice.
In 2011/12 we produced a template document outlining a low
level preventative support hub for people with Asperger’s Syndrome and their
carers and presented it to the local authority and NHS. We were clear that this was what we all
wanted to see.
3. Being flexible in our approach
Telford & Wrekin council already had an Asperger
specialist worker doing low level preventative and supportive work, so we knew the
concept worked. We initially campaigned
to keep this but the post was lost. We
had to change our focus to campaigning for something new and different and now we
have the Drop In hub facility. Remember
- some you win…some you lose!
4. Target your
campaign and build relationships
We targeted
and worked with all five Shropshire and
Telford's 5 MPs, the relevant people in the councils and NHS, council Scrutiny
committees, local BBC radio, Health and Wellbeing boards, Clinical Commissioning
Groups. It took pressure on all sides to
get things moving.
5. Get involved and
have your say
Get involved in your autism strategy development partnership
groups and work with local councils and NHS and commissioners - things just will
not happen without your involvement.
6. Don’t give up
The Drop In facility is being trialled in Telford
and funded by the Council and the CCG.
Our next challenge is to sustain this facility and see it rolled out
elsewhere.
We are very keen to see this facility sustained locally and
provided elsewhere. Our campaigning has
led to a project being delivered by four voluntary sector groups, working in
partnership to deliver a seamless preventative and supportive service for
people with autism and Asperger Syndrome and their carers. You can do the same in your area – just keep
pushing for action!
For more information about the Hub, please visit www.stacs-shropshire.org.uk/information/telford-wrekin-hub/
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