Clinical

working together: developing an educative programme on the use of touch

<p>Sex education for people with learning disabilities is a contentious issue (Craft 1987, Hinsberger et al 1991, Cole and Cole 1993, Beebee 2003). According to McCarthy and Thompson (1998), ‘formal sex education for people with learning disabilities is clearly more significant than for other adults’. This is also the case for children and young people with learning disabilities. Atkinson (2002) highlights that for these groups in particular sex education is not just a one-off series of lessons, but a lifelong process.</p>

Jobs