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Three decades after Penrose

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

W. I. Fraser*
Affiliation:
Welsh Centre for Learning Disabilities, Meridian Court, North Road, Cardiff CF14 3BL
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Abstract

Type
Editorials
Copyright
Copyright © 2000 The Royal College of Psychiatrists 

The best word for the transformation of learning disability practice in the past 30 years is ‘enlightenment’. This transformation in knowledge, skills and attitudes has mirrored, for the lives of people with handicaps, the changes in society which occurred in the last decades of the 18th century (the Enlightenment).

This issue of the British Journal of Psychiatry contains six papers that reflect topics which would not have exercised specialists very much 30 years ago, but which are now at the centre of the field: molecular genetics, the pervasive developmental disorders, psychotherapy for people with learning disabilities, secondary health delivery in the post-institutional era, the impact of ageing, and approaches to psychotropic drug reduction.

Attitudes towards learning disability in the 1990s would not have been recognised 30 years ago. The 18th-century Enlightenment placed emphasis on “ shared humanity, a duty to improve the lives of others” (Reference CleggClegg, 1998). This attitude only started to reach most people with learning disabilities in the last three decades of the 20th century. Until the publication of Better Services for the Mentally Handicapped (Department of Health and Social Security, 1971), people with learning disability did not generally seem worth it.

It is almost 30 years since Penrose died. Strengths developed since then include theoretically sound classifications built on multivariate statistics, more theoretically sound clinical inventories and questionnaires, and, most vividly, genetic technology, exemplified by the recent identification of the gene responsible for Rett syndrome (Reference Amir, Van den Veyver and WanAmir et al, 1999). Muir's (Reference Muir2000, this issue) paper is rich in new knowledge and its practical consequences, such as the new light cast on the concept of pfropfschizophrenia (Reference Doody, Johnstone and SandersonDoody et al, 1998).

Berney's review of autism (Reference Berney2000, this issue) points out that it is more prevalent the more severe the degree of learning disability, and raises three questions. First, how much does autism contribute to learning disability? Second and conversely, can severe learning disability be distinguishable from autism? Third, are there some medical disorders which make learning disability particularly likely to produce autism?

In 1970, the settlement of people from institutions in the community had hardly started. In England and Wales (much less so in Europe), the process of de-institutionalisation is now largely established. The record linkage study reported here by Morgan et al (Reference Morgan, Ahmed and Kerr2000, this issue) shows how the health care uptake of people with learning disabilities is different from that of the general population and how the presence of a learning disability hospital affects health provision, and gives us some indication of psychiatric hospital activity for those with learning disability in the post-institutional era.

The radically improved survival rates for individuals with learning disability in Europe have resulted in the realisation of the impact that ageing will have on learning disability services. In 1929 the average life expectancy of an individual with Down's syndrome was nine years; by 1969 various surveys suggested that it was 59 years. It is still increasing, albeit less strikingly. The fact that people with learning disabilities are living longer has been recognised by the International Association for the Scientific Study of Intellectual Disability via the creation of a very active special interest research group and by the European Commission's fifth biomedical research framework. Holland's (Reference Holland2000, this issue) review emphasises these developing age-related problems and how diagnostic over-shadowing obscures pathology. Here again we have evidence on which to base services.

In a recent Cochrane Commemorative Lecture in Cardiff, Chalmers expressed the ambition that decisions about health be informed by reliable and relevant evidence. Brylewski & Duggan (Reference Brylewski and Duggan1998) and Duggan & Brylewski (Reference Duggan and Brylewski1999), in two systematic reviews, have pointed out that there is little basis in the literature for the prescription of antipsychotic medication to people with learning disabilities, even those with schizophrenia. Hollins & Sinason (Reference Hollins and Sinason2000, this issue) admit that they cannot conduct a systematic review of the use of psychological therapies in people with learning disabilities because there is insufficient published literature. They report that there are few outcome studies.

Chalmers (Reference Chalmers1997) pointed out that new developments in health care are not necessarily advances. This view is vividly illustrated in the use of psychotropic drugs for the management of behaviour problems in those with learning disability. Rights issues, menacing litigation and the clarification of challenging behaviour have kindled interest from the National Health Service Research and Development Directorate (and the Health Technology Assessment Commissioners) in a search for evidence of the effectiveness of behavioural and psychopharmacological measures and have led to commissioned antipsychotic drug reduction studies, as described by Ahmed et al (Reference Ahmed, Fraser and Kerr2000, this issue).

Chalmers (Reference Chalmers1998) has also made a plea for researchers to involve the public more. This ought to include people with learning disability. This topic has recently been addressed by the Royal College of Psychiatrists working party that is preparing guidelines for ethical committees on psychiatric research. Research in learning disability is made more difficult by people with learning disability often being automatically excluded from participation. They have been regarded as not having the moral development to enable them to contribute for altruistic reasons to non-therapeutic research. This lack of opportunity to take part is now at last regarded as disenfranchising. Equally importantly, such an attitude detracts from the representativeness of mental health research. Approaches to determining capability have recently been reviewed by Wong et al (Reference Wong, Clare and Gunn1999). A blanket “dependent-incapable-status” approach is gradually being displaced by a functional approach (Reference HoggettHoggett, 1994; Reference ArscottArscott, 1997) which focuses on the person's relative abilities and the extent to which these abilities meet, with careful additional explanation, the demands of a particular decision-making task. It is to be hoped that people with learning disabilities will in future have more chance to share the burdens and benefits of ordinary people (Reference EdwardsEdwards, 1997). The following six papers demonstrate the enlightenment of the past 30 years. I am sure that Penrose would be pleased.

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