
Parents who care for children with special needs, particularly those whose children have multiple disabilities or intellectual delays, are pioneers in home health care and caregiving, yet their experience and expertise are rarely recognized. This book collects parent narratives, personal experience, and academic research to portray the lives of parent caregivers, looking at both the trials and the triumphs inherent in raising a child with special needs.Parents raising children with special needs often must devote all of their resources, both tangible and spiritual, to providing care long into their offspring's lives. Their experience exceeds the usual parameters of parenting. This book examines all of the facets of their parenting role, the care they provide, challenges they face, and questions many assumptions. It presents parents as neither emotional wrecks nor overburdened saints, but as moral individuals struggling to find their own way through relatively unexplored territory.This book begins to recognize the moral consequences of providing long-term care for a child with complex needs. Using a virtue ethic framework isolates the various tasks involved, and evaluates the moral demands placed on the parent attempting to perform them. On their journey to provide for their child the best life possible, parents must alter their own lives and attitudes, and become the sort of person who can perform the necessary caregiving.Raising a child with special needs demands from the parent a reassessment of their personal and social lives. Some of the consequences, such as the presumed emotional and physical burden of constant attentiveness and the numerous unexpected responsibilities, have been reported previously. But the need for competence, which drives an acquisition of medical knowledge, has not previously been analyzed, nor has there been recognition of the enormous moral task of encouraging identity formation in a child with intellectual delays or disabilities.
This book investigates the moral dimensions and unrecognized expertise of parents who provide long-term, complex care for children with disabilities. Lisa Freitag, drawing on her academic background, synthesizes personal parent narratives with virtue ethics to analyze the labor involved in raising children with intellectual delays or multiple disabilities. The work argues that these parents function as pioneers in home health care, requiring a fundamental reassessment of their personal identities and social roles to meet the demands of their caregiving responsibilities.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in disability studies and sociology recognize this work as a significant contribution to the ethics of care. Readers frequently note the balance between academic rigor and the empathetic inclusion of lived experience in the prose.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190491817
ISBN-13:
9780190491819
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