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People with an intellectual disability: under-reporting sexual violence

Sara Willott (Department of Learning Disabilities, Birmingham Community Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, Aston, UK)
Wendy Badger (Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham, UK)
Vicky Evans (Birmingham Community Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, Aston, UK)

The Journal of Adult Protection

ISSN: 1466-8203

Article publication date: 21 February 2020

Issue publication date: 21 April 2020

915

Abstract

Purpose

People with an intellectual disability are much more likely to be sexually violated and the violation is less likely to be reported. Despite this being high-lighted at least 3 decades ago and improvements in both safeguarding and national reporting processes, under-reporting remains a problem. This paper explored under-reporting alongside prevention possibilities using safeguarding alerts raised in a Community Learning Disability Team within a UK NHS trust.

Design/methodology/approach

Using a combination of authentic but anonymised case vignettes and descriptive data drawn from the safeguarding team, under-reporting was examined through the lens of an ecological model. Safeguarding alerts raised in a particular year were compared with the number expected if all (estimated) cases of abuse were disclosed and reported.

Findings

Only 4.4 per cent of expected abuse cases were reported to the team, which is lower than the reporting level the authors had expected from the literature. There is evidence in the literature of the under-reporting of sexual assault for all kinds of people. Arguably, the implications of under-reporting for PwID are even more traumatic.

Research limitations/implications

Constraints included the lack of standardisation in data collection within the statutory services that report to the Birmingham Safeguarding Adults Board. One key recommendation is that the national provider of data for the NHS in the UK requires more complex and standardised audit information that would allow each local authority to benchmark their practice against a higher protection standard. Another recommendation is that compliance to quality standards sits within a comprehensive strategy.

Originality/value

This paper explored the extent to which the previously documented under-reporting concern remains an issue. Certainly eye-balling safeguarding compliance data in the NHS organisation we worked in led us to a concern that reporting might be even lower than implied in the literature. This together with a renewed spot-light on sexual violence (e.g, NHS England, 2018) led us to decide that it was timely to re-examine the problem.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Jenny Riley (Senior Intelligence Officer) Public Health Information and Intelligence Team, Birmingham City Council, for checking the data.

Citation

Willott, S., Badger, W. and Evans, V. (2020), "People with an intellectual disability: under-reporting sexual violence", The Journal of Adult Protection, Vol. 22 No. 2, pp. 75-86. https://doi.org/10.1108/JAP-05-2019-0016

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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