Compartir
Título
A Pioneer Tool to Reduce Restrictive Practices toward People with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Disability
Restrictive practices
Restraints
Restrictive interventions
Organizational transformation
Human rights
Clasificación UNESCO
61 Psicología
5802.05 Educación Especial; Minusválidos y deficientes Mentales
5906.01 Derechos Humanos
Fecha de publicación
2024
Editor
MDPI
Citación
Sánchez-Gómez, V., Verdugo, M. Á., Crespo, M., & San Román, A. (2024). A Pioneer Tool to Reduce Restrictive Practices toward People with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities. Behavioral Sciences, 14(4), 344. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14040344
Resumen
[EN] Reducing restrictive practices toward individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities is a globally recognized imperative and human rights priority. This paper presents a novel tool called LibRe for assessing and reducing restrictive practices. This tool involved an instrumental multistage design and collaboration between professionals, individuals with disabilities, family members, and experts from different fields. It addresses diverse restrictive practices in five key domains: physical or mechanical, chemical or pharmacological, structural, relational, and practices related to contexts and supports. It addresses practices that are pertinent to the Spanish context and that existing tools have not covered. Embedded as a step within an organizational approach, LibRe fosters organizational transformation and provides resources to achieve outcomes within reduction plans for restrictive practices. In total, 156 teams comprising 585 professionals, 64 people with disabilities, and 44 family members responded to the tool. In terms of evidence for internal structure validity, the oblique five-factor model exhibited an adequate fit through confirmatory factor analysis, along with satisfactory reliability indices, according to ordinal alpha and omega. Users positively appraised the tool’s usefulness and identified its strengths and challenges. Although further research is needed, preliminary evidence frames LibRe as a useful resource for practice and research.
URI
DOI
10.3390/BS14040344
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones