Boy was ârestrained unnecessarilyâ at special school
The mother of a young boy ârestrained unnecessarilyâ in a chair in school has said she feels vindicated by a watchdogâs report into the case.
Deirdre Shakespeareâs son Harry, who is autistic and non-verbal, was restrained in a chair at his special school without her knowledge.
The Public Services Ombudsman has investigated Ms Shakespeareâs complaint about Harryâs treatment.
The watchdog said Harry was ârestrained unnecessarilyâ and âthe failures in this case caused the childâs parents a huge amount of distressâ.
At the time of the incident Harry was five years old.
The ombudsman also criticised the Western Health Trust for failing to monitor his seating in school.
He can walk unaided but used a special chair at school mealtimes.
But according to the ombudsmanâs report, when the school claimed it was having difficulty moving him to the dining room, the trust added a wheeled base to the chair.
The ombudsman said that an assessment of Harryâs needs should have been carried out and that âin approving and fitting the wheeled base to the chair the trust did not fully consider the childâs human rightsâ.
âThe childâs mother also said the lap belt on the chair was much too tight,â the ombudsmanâs report said.
âWhen she raised this with the trust she was told that the chair was also used by others in the school, and that her son could use another chair if she wished.â
But that chair was âmore restrictive and had foot straps, a lap strap, and a wheeled base,â the ombudsman said.
The ombudsmanâs report concluded that âthe chair was an over prescription and caused him to be restrained unnecessarilyâ.
In a statement, the deputy ombudsman Sean Martin said: âThe trust should have given guidance to the school on how to use the specialist chairs so that the child was only restrained when it was absolutely necessary.
âThe principle of using the least restraint possible should be an imperative for everyone, regardless of the setting.â
âSome sort of closureâ
Harry is now 13 and Ms Shakespeare told BBC News NI that it had been âquite a lengthy investigationâ.
âWe feel vindicated after all this time,â she said.
âIt brings us some sort of closure that this issue â as long-winded as it has been â has now been investigated thoroughly.
âHarry canât speak, he has no voice so this is an opportunity for this report to be his voice.â
With other parents, Ms Shakespeare has been campaigning for a number of years for Harryâs Law â to make it compulsory for schools to report when they isolated or restrained a child.
It would involve repeal of Article 4 of the Education (NI) Order 1998 which enables teachers to use force to stop pupils âengaging in any behaviour prejudicial to the maintenance of good order and disciplineâ.
That call has also previously been backed by the celebrity and businesswoman Paris Hilton.
âWe are looking for better scrutiny whenever restrictive practices have been used on a child,â Ms Shakespeare said.
âAs it currently stands there is no legal obligation for a school to report whenever a child has been restrained at school.â
Happy in school
The Department of Education consulted on new statutory guidance on the reduction and management of restrictive practices in 2023.
But Ms Shakespeare said that it still left âa lot of grey areas and was very open to interpretationâ.
âIt still didnât safeguard children,â she said.
âThe end goal for us is to make sure that whenever restraint has been used that it is recorded and reported.
âWe donât want to see any further loopholes being put in place.
âWe want to see better safeguards in place so that this never happens again.â
She said that Harry was âvery happyâ in school now, but added that his case showed there also needed to be a joint approach to restraint taken by the departments of health and education.
âThey collaborate together in schools and theyâre overseeing the care of our children,â she said.
âI do feel this should have been looked at from a health and education perspective and not just one or the other.
âWe need to make sure for every child coming through into education that every child is safeguarded from the misuse of restrictive practices.â