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How should we talk about FASD?

In June, I wrote a post summarizing a Manitoba report on the overlaps and gaps between expert and public understandings about FASD. Today, I’m sharing the researcher’s recommendations for changing the FASD conversation.

The authors identified two key issues that make it challenging for policymakers and service providers to cultivate public support for FASD initiatives:

  1. The narrow understanding of FASD as a problem that results from a woman’s lack of willpower and selfish decisions limits people’s thinking on what the province can do to make meaningful progress on the issue of FASD.
  2. The public’s understanding of people with FASD as having Forever Damaged Minds blocks productive thinking about how wraparound social services could help people lead more fulfilling lives.

The report suggests some intentional communication strategies for helping to reframe the way the public thinks about FASD. Here are some of their recommendations:

Reframe FASD as a contextual, not individual, issue by promoting 3 values: interdependence, ingenuity, and pragmatism: 

Communicators should put forward a definition of FASD—in educational materials, in schools, in doctors’ offices, on websites—that describes FASD as a disorder whose causes are biological and social. For example: 

Communicators should clearly explain how FASD is directly related to the social environment by using explanatory chains: Always tell “wide-angle” stories:

Cue and expand productive cultural models to shift thinking away from individual blame and towards contextual factors:

Counter fatalism with detailed descriptions of effective solutions:

 

People with FASD may have an “invisible disability” that can include difficulties with memory and cognition, organization, and sensory overload. But the brain is always growing and changing, and innovative programs can help people with FASD manage their challenges with excellent results. For example, when young children with FASD are coached in cognitive skills like self-regulation and memory, and trained in coping with a variety of sensory experiences, their behaviour can improve tremendously over time. When these services are provided routinely and children and their families are given support and encouragement by therapists and behaviour specialists, children with FASD can learn to adapt to classroom environments and participate in a range of activities. Programs like these work for children with FASD, and it’s important that all children in Manitoba be able to access the support they need.

Explain how trauma experienced by Indigenous communities contributes to FASD:

Explain how not addressing FASD on a large scale stunts society’s growth:

 

Remember to take a look at the full report here. It’s full of helpful examples and metaphors. The communication strategies start on page 39.

 

Hello! I’m Dr. Marnie Makela and I’m one of the voices behind the CanFASD blog. I’m also a researcher with CanFASD and a Registered Psychologist in Edmonton, AB. I received my PhD in School and Clinical Child Psychology from the University of Alberta.  I work with individuals with FASD and other complex disabilities, their families, and their service providers to complete assessments and develop effective intervention plans that will create meaningful and positive life experiences. 

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