Parents call for say in Wolverhampton special needs provision

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Parents call for say in Wolverhampton special needs provision
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A report shows a 73.5% rise in the number of children being diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorders.

Priya Pallavi, Shashmi Kambo, Noelle Simpson and Natalie Brewer were among dozens attending the launch of a new parents group Parents say they hope to be listened to as Wolverhampton faces rising numbers of children needing support for Special Educational Needs and Disabilities .

from City of Wolverhampton Council showed a 73.5% increase in the number of children being diagnosed with Autistic Spectrum Disorders , along with a rise in the number of children offered an Education, Health and Care Plan . While it mirrors national trends, the council said greater awareness and identification were likely to be responsible and that it also means greater pressure on budgets. At the launch of the new SEND Wolves Forum in the city, parents and carers said it was important that their children continued to be cared for, with one adding: "No child should be left behind." Natalie Brewer, one of the forum's organisers, said: "We want change, we want things to improve" but that city leaders must make sure "services are right for people and meeting the children's needs". Priya Pallavi was among those attending the forum. She has lived in a number of countries, including Singapore, and said none of them gave the level of support the UK gives to SEND children and their parents. "We need to preserve this at all costs and make sure that this becomes stronger, going forwards and not do it away.""Not everybody is just catching ADHD or SEND like a virus, the diagnoses have improved, but the support hasn't improved at that rate," she said.EHCPs are documents which set out the needs of an individual child and the council report noted that while numbers were rising, they remained below the national and regional averages. Jacqui Coogan, the councillor responsible for children, young people and education, said: "While speech, language and communication is still the highest area of need, it is now closely followed by autism spectrum conditions. "It is likely that this is as a result of better early identification and improved autism pathways which have led to a greater awareness around autism."Natalie Brewer said it was important to "get across all disabilities". "We want to include everyone, so no-one's left out whatever disability, whatever ethnic background, whatever cultural differences, we want everyone to be involved in it," she said.Jacqui Coogan said better testing and awareness was the likely cause of the increasing number of diagnosesMum Shashmi Kambo said there was often a language barrier, meaning some families "don't know where to go".When the report went before the council's children and young people scrutiny panel on 11 March, it was praised by councillors for its thoroughness. Most of the trends, such as high ratio of male diagnoses to female diagnoses, long waits for assessments and growing numbers of applications for EHCPs match trends seen in the country at large, councillors were told. Helen Taylor, the council's head of SEND and inclusion, told the meeting in some cases, such as the number of SEND children being excluded from school, Wolverhampton is below the national average.Corinne Marie and Pav Mahey were among those offering support to the parentsAmong those offering support at the forum launch were Corinne Marie and Pav Mahey whose aim is to help parents with the challenges of looking after neurodivergent children or children with other needs. "Catering to the needs of a SEN child can take its toll on any parent" and she offers to teach techniques such as yoga, reiki and meditation," Marie said.Mahey said some parents can feel self conscious when going out with their children in public, adding that needed to change.More meetings are planned for the forum, with coffee mornings and gatherings in the evenings and at weekends.Pallavi added: "I would really hope that this voice turns into a force" and another mum, Noelle Simpson, said: "The parent is the child's ultimate advocate." She said it was important that the system was willing to "adapt and flex" and that there was an "understanding that this is something that isn't a one-size-fits-all approach".Your photos: Cherry blossoms and a daffodil duck'Becoming a train driver in my 40s was the best thing I ever did'

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