NHS EXPERT TO INVESTIGATE THE GROWING NUMBER OF SPECIAL NEEDS CHILDREN IN GIBRALTAR

A UK expert is launching a study into why there has been an increase in the number of children with special educational needs in Gibraltar.

NHS public health registrar Una Geary will start work on the study in February alongside GHA Director of Public Health Dr Helen Carter.

It follows on from figures supplied by the Department of Education that suggests that there are more children who need extra help at local schools.

Gib Schools

Minister for Education John Cortes commissioned Geary to carry out the research after the data surfaced.

Geary will carry out interviews and set up focus groups with key local stakeholders ‘to explore their views on likely root causes’, the government said in a statement.

A child is defined as having ‘special needs’ if they have a learning difficulty which calls for ‘special educational provision’ to be made for them.

The study – which will take place across all government schools – will require the help of the local community.

The government asked charities, support groups and associations to take part in an open hall discussion at the John Mackintosh Hall on February 26 to raise ideas before Geary arrives.

It happens to the best of us. Sometimes, our “awareness” of the needs of our children with special needs eclipses our awareness of the needs of their siblings.

Linda Scotson’s daughter, Lili, was only two when her brother Doran was born and soon after suffered a brain injury. She has been Doran’s companion, motivator, and carer — in fact, sister extraordinaire. In helping Doran, she has had to cope with other problems — the loss of her father, ill health, and her own minor neurological difficulties. But she has done so with courage and determination.