The NIHR Policy Research Unit in Health and Social Care Workforce published a report from a scoping study titled "The Demand and Supply of Therapists for Children and Young People with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities," by Prof Ian Kessler and Prof Annette Boaz.
The provision of therapies for children and young people (CYP) with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) can be an affectively challenging, sometimes procedurally complex, process for the various stakeholders involved.
However, the efficiency and effectiveness of this process, are crucial to various outcomes, in particular to the life chances of the children and young people in question, to the welfare of the families supporting them and to the working lives of the employees responsible for delivering the therapies.
Despite the importance of such therapies for CYP with SEND, there is limited precise and detailed information on the need and demand for these services, and on the scale and nature of the workforce tasked with providing them.
Given this paucity of information, the Government's SEND Review (2022) expressed a commitment to fill this knowledge gap. The findings presented in this report are an initial step towards meeting this goal. Thus, the current scoping study was designed to:
While the study touched on the therapy needs and demands of CYP with SEND, its principal focus was on the supply side and on the NHS workforce delivering them. In substantive terms the study aimed to:
The study concentrated on the most commonly drawn upon therapy services for CYP with SEND:
After presenting the approach taken in conducting the scoping study, the findings are presented in three parts:
More information: Ian Kessler et al, The Demand and Supply of Therapists for Children and Young People with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities: A Scoping Study, King's College London (2024). DOI: 10.18742/pub01-181
Provided by King's College London