Children with Disabilities
This section is an additional part of your safeguarding training, and covers issues specifically related to children with disabilities.
12. Isolation
Isolation from other children and adults means that many disabled
children struggle to tell others about their experiences making it easier for abuse
and neglect to remain hidden. Having few contacts outside the home, and
inadequate and poorly co-ordinated support services for both disabled children
and their families can increase isolation. The National Working Group on Child
Protection and Disability note that disabled children (and others close to them)
may not communicate about abuse because of a fear of losing the services on
which they depend (NSPCC, 2003, as cited by Gov.uk, July 2009).
