Awareness of the need of deinstitutionalisation appeared in the last
decade of the previous century. The first actual action was to establish a day
centre in Kriva Palanka and the centre for social work in collaboration with
Poraka and Red Cross soon after withdrew Kriva Palanka residents to foster
families. The beginning of a systematic deinstitutionalisation, however, is
considered to be at the onset of the previous decade with the UNICEF project in
Demir Kapija of resettlement of 30 children to their original families or
foster care in 2000s. Simultaneously mental health reform was staged and, in
2008 National Deinstitutionalisation Strategy was adopted. That gave spin to a
process of resettlement of 67 residents of Demir Kapija to the group homes in
Negotino and Skopje, which was performed by Mental Health Initiative (MHI) and
Poraka Negotino.
First action – retrieving residents
A first action that in deinstitutionalisation mythology of today
seems to neglect what happened as a targeted (but isolated) action, which in
fact was the first step of deinstitutionalisation in Macedonia. Centre for social work Kriva Palanka, in
cooperation with RCPLIP – PORAKA and Red Cross, resettled in 1996–1997 all of
its users from Demir Kapija to foster families, through local initiative
supported by the municipality Kriva Palanka.
Namely, the centre for social work initiated the process of resettlement
into foster families (families that were in social risks and with unsolved
housing need) and the municipality provided small houses (so called social
houses). In this way, resolving two issues at one go – solve the housing issue
of the foster families and resettle people from Demir Kapija. The identified
foster families moved together with the resettled users in the social houses.
Total number of nine users from Demir Kapija were resettled within this action.
Unlike subsequent projects, this project was neither initiated nor
funded by an international agency. The leader of the project Mihajlo
Kolev, a social worker at the local centre for social work was a member
of RCPLIP – PORAKA, which has already had discussions on deinstitutionalisation
and community based services. In fact, in 1994 the first day centre was created
in Kriva Palanka. Again in cooperation between RCPLIP – PORAKA (with a leading
contribution of Violeta Dimoska), Red Cross and centre for social work with
MoLSP.
Children First – from Demir Kapija to foster families
In 2000, after the moratoria of new admissions in the Special
Institute Demir Kapija, UNICEF initiated and supported a project focused on
deinstitutionalisation of children with intellectual disabilities. The UNICEF
funded project ‘Educational and social activities with children form the
Special Institute Demir Kapija aimed at deinstitutionalisation’ was implemented
by a project team led by prof. Petrov from the Institute of Defectology (now
Special Education and Rehabilitation), with help of an Italian NGO EducAid in
the period 2001–2004.
The goals of the project were (Petrov, 2016):
-
To organise educational and socialisation activities with the children,
in order to create condition for a certain number of children to develop
independent living skills as a precondition for their acceptance by their original
or foster families.
-
To organise close cooperation with the centres for social work that will
have to provide conditions for successful integration of the children in the
communities (to re-establish connections with the original families or to
provide foster care).
In this way, the project was simultaneously seeking to act within
the institution – changing the perspective on the children and ways of working
with them, and to act outside preparing the services to accept the children.
Challenges faced during the implementation of the project (Petrov, 2016):
-
Difficulties in organising day care centres for children;
-
To abandon the medical approach and to create ’Macedonian model’ of deinstitutionalisation,
adapted to the local circumstances;
-
To be patient, not to burn out in own ambitions.
This meant that the project started at a slow pace, with a lot of
conceptual and practical considerations and preparations.
A team of young and committed professionals carried out the
preparation for resettlement of the children. They worked directly with the
children in the institution, developing the potential of the children while encouraging
attachment with the project staff in first place, then to foster families. In
the period of four years, a total number of fifty children were involved in the
project activities, but only thirty left the institution. At that point the
project was ended – prematurely so for the remaining children – possibly also
challenged by slow implementation.
Claimer: This blog is intended as a part of Situation Analysis
and Assessment/ Evaluation Report of Implementation of National Strategy on
Deinstitutionalisation 2008–2018, which will be soon presented to the
public within the EU framework project Technical assistance support for the
deinstitutionalization process in social sector. For this blog, Vlado Krstovski
is considered to be co-author.
Reference:
Petrov, R., (2016), 15 godini
od procesot za deinstitucionalizacija na deca od specialniot zavod Demir Kapija
(15 Years of the Deinstitutionalisation Process of Children from the Demir
Kapija Special Institution), Skopje: report for the MoLSP.
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