IGP Stories

What does basic mean to people with special needs and disabilities?

Victorine Ngobo

18 April 2023

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word ‘basic’ means ‘forming an essential foundation or starting point; fundamental’. What does basic mean to people with special needs and disabilities?


Basic shouldn’t mean average, basic means what is essential to each person’s diverse needs

Access to education, housing and healthcare are fundamental needs. Yet, they are often designed for the “average” person in mind. “Basic” services are therefore often inadequate and inappropriate for people with special needs and disabilities. Welfare and social support must be designed for the diverse needs of people for it to be truly basic.

Lily, a mother of a child with special needs, laments the lack of appropriate education for her child:

"In the area, there is no support for kids with special educational needs (SENCO) in schools. Even if we live here in Heath, we moved the kids to a school out of the borough.”

Victorine, who suffers from a spinal condition and lives with her two teenagers who are her carers, also speaks about the lack of appropriate housing from the council:

"My flat is on the first floor with 17 stairs and, since my health condition more than three years, I have only been allocated first floor temporary houses. In total, I have been waiting 15 years for a permanent house.”


Inadequate basic support forces people with special needs and disabilities to struggle alone

Amber’s life changed dramatically 3 months ago due to an accident. She lost her job and had to move to the ground floor of her home. She is in dire need of an adapted house, but the waiting list is very long. This means she must move out of the borough and out of London for an appropriate house, forcing her to leave her friends and her community. Amber, who lives alone and suffers from a spinal injury said:

"I have no choice, I will be alone.”

Feeling alone takes a toll on your mental health

Mental healthcare must become a pillar of basic social support. People need mental health support not only to face life’s struggles but also to accept help when they need it.

At the same time, basic social services like housing, legal support, livelihood opportunities, security, and education, can enable mental health when designed with people’s diverse needs in mind. People with disabilities and special needs, and people from diverse ethnic backgrounds, must be included in the decision-making process. Daisy, a single mother of 2 children on the autism spectrum, recalls the effects of a lack of basic support on her mental health:

"In the past I attempted to end my life but now I realise my kids need me and they are vulnerable.”

Rose, a mother of a child with cerebral palsy, also described her struggles:

"I don’t have time to think about my wellbeing. I can’t get depressed; I don’t have a choice because my kids depend on me.”


Mental healthcare is welfare, and welfare leads to mental health

Mental healthcare should be a pillar of basic social support. People need mental health support not only to face the multiple barriers to prosperity in their lives but also to accept help when they need it.

At the same time, basic social services like secure livelihood opportunities, legal support, education, housing, communal spaces, and security, can enable mental health by alleviating barriers to prosperity. For these to truly help, they must be designed with people’s diverse needs in mind. Providing support for and including people with disabilities and special needs in the design of basic social support is therefore a critical part of prosperity.

If you could speak to a policymaker now, what would you say?

If MPs had listened to those parents who have children with learning disabilities, there would be more spaces for children with learning disabilities. When you are going to a school or park, you see a normal park designed for normal children, and you see that your child cannot do anything because it wasn’t developed for special needs. You won’t bring your child to the park! But this child deserves a park. This child deserves to have education for special needs.”

Victorine

About Victorine

Victorine NGOBO is a Citizen Social Scientist in Barking and Dagenham. A divorced mother of two girls and an everlasting student. With a Finance background in France, she has started from scratch in England - from an ESOL course to a Masters course in Public Health. She has contributed as a Stop Smoking Champion and as a Child Weight Management volunteer in her borough. She is currently studying for a Diploma in Reflexology and holistically supporting women who have faced and are facing domestic violence, offering mental health support and reflexology. This project enabled her to realise her dream as a researcher.

"I always wanted to hear from my fellow citizens' voices, histories, and experiences. It is not a community without citizens, and it cannot change without listening to citizens' voices.”


Acknowledgements

This zine was jointly conceived of by Victorine NGOBO and Gillian Chan, based on research that Victorine and Regina Khan conducted. The findings, images and content are Victorine and Regina’s, the editing and design Gillian’s. This process would not have been possible without the guidance and support of: Dr Saffron Woodcraft, Dr James Shraiky, Dr Alessandra Radicati di Brozolo, José Izcue Gana and David Heymann. The study was co-designed with members of the London Prosperity Board and is jointly funded by: Royal Docks, Lendlease, London Legacy Development Corporation, Hill Group, Poplar HARCA, and the London Boroughs of Hackney, Waltham Forest, and Barking and Dagenham.


Follow Us