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Supporting Survivors with Cognitive and Developmental Disabilities

Haleigh Rigger
Haleigh Rigger looks straight into the camera with a slight smile. Haleigh is wearing a heather gray sweater, is wearing cat eye shaped glasses and has long violet hair.

On June 3rd I had the opportunity to present strategies for supporting survivors with cognitive and developmental disabilities thanks to a partnership between my agency, Indiana Coalition to End Sexual Assault and Human Trafficking (ICESAHT), and the Bureau of Quality Improvement Services (BQIS), a division of the Family and Social Services Administration (FSSA). This training focused on how direct support professionals, case managers, and their leadership teams can best support survivors after they disclose. We also discussed strategies for building trust and rapport and navigating the tricky waters of maintaining a survivor’s privacy while also following state and agency mandates in reporting. Lastly, we invite disability service providers to review their protocols, engage self-advocates in conversations about sexual wellness and violence, and incorporate trauma-informed principles into their organizational culture. You can access the recorded training here and below.

As individuals with developmental disabilities are sexually assaulted at a rate 7x higher than folks without disabilities (NPR, 2018), it is crucial that we in the anti-violence movement partner with caregivers and disability service agencies in responding to and preventing violence against folks with disabilities. Even more important, those of us who are professionals in this movement must center people with disabilities in our anti-violence work and pass the mic to those who are most impacted. It takes multi-disciplinary teams, that are led by and for people with disabilities, to holistically serve survivors and prevent violence from happening in the first place. As my friends and colleagues at Indiana Disability Justice say, “Nothing about us, without us.”

A list of 17 webinars featuring centering disabled people and members of Indiana Disability Justice is available at this link.

Post authored by Haleigh Rigger, Indiana Coalition to End Sexual Violence and Human Trafficking and Indiana Disability Justice Leadership

Posted by Cierra Olivia Thomas-Williams, Indiana Disability Justice Leadership, Indiana Coalition Against Domestic Violence

Supporting Survivors with Cognitive and Developmental Disabilities, a Training

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