Stop to Listen: Findings from the ACT Young Carers Research Project
- Författare
- Moore, T.
- Titel
- Stop to Listen: Findings from the ACT Young Carers Research Project
- Utgivningsår
- 2005
- Stad
- Lyneham
- Utgivare
- Youth Coalition of the ACT
- Sammanfattning
This research project, funded by the ACT Department of Disability, Housing and
Community Services through the Carers Recognition Grants Program, sought to discover
more about the lived experiences, needs and goals of young carers in the ACT in an
attempt to identify more responsive and accessible service delivery.
For the purposes of this research report, young carers were defined as:
children and young people under the age of 18 who care for a family member
with an illness or disability, or a drug or alcohol or mental health issue.
It has been shown that caring can be a positive experience for children and young people
when they receive adequate levels of support but that when unsupported, young carers
can experience significant physical, emotional, social, educational, and financial hardship.
It is discomforting, therefore, to find that most research has shown that for a range of
political and practical reasons, many young carers and their families are sustained in
positions of significant disadvantage and suffer on without the supports and services that
they both need and deserve.
While there has been considerable discussion about the service needs and experiences of
carers, generally, there has been little research focusing on the specific needs of young
carers and their access to appropriate, responsive and quality services.
This has been for a number of reasons. Firstly, viewed primarily as incapable, children
and young people's roles as social citizens are discredited, which leads to a situation
where communities either disbelieve or problematise their care responsibilities and fail to
afford them the support they need. Secondly, afraid of stigma, inappropriate intervention
or shame, many families have felt compelled to hide young caring from the eyes of the
community. Thirdly, young caring raises a moral and economic tension – do we condone
young caring (including its negative impacts) and save the community significant expense
or do we prohibit it and further problematise those who assume such roles?
This study attempted to navigate its way through this potential minefield by
acknowledging that young caring is a natural, potentially life-affirming and skilldeveloping
experience and by seeking out children and young people's own reflections on
their roles and how they, themselves, see caring impacting on their lives.