am watched this film in bits,after recording it on sky+.
good documentary,couldnt have cared less that it was in french because am dont watch tv with sound on and use subs anyway,the programmes own subs were a lot more reliable than skys.
Am was left confused by a lot of it,as it focused on other residents in the house a lot to.
did Sabine have ECT when she was at hospital? is her heavy drueling and zombified state because of medication she is on? drueling is always a sign are on to much or at the least is a severe side effect of some meds,not good.
the way she went from one state to another was extreme.
the staff at her residential home didnt seem trained in what they call 'physical intervention',as when they were removing Sabine [or it could have been another resident] from the kitchen,they held their arms over rather than under so were still getting bitten,any staff who work here have to do physical intervention courses,and use under the arm restraints whilst pinning arms down the side and holding the hand [a staff on both sides] so there is no chance of getting hit by head or bitten,though Sabines staff seemed to be nice and patient and she is somewhere quiet and peaceful so that is at least one good thing-it sounded bad that there is hardly any care at all for adults who need to live in residential homes in their country and that autists often live with their parents till they die,not good at all.
maybe this documentary will get them more awareness that their country needs more support.
also,am remember them saying Sabine was finally diagnosed with pyscho-infantile with autistic behavior,what does that mean?
_________________
>severely autistic.
>>the residential autist;
http://theresidentialautist.blogspot.co.uk
blogging from the view of an ex institutionalised autism/ID activist now in community care.
>>>help to keep bullying off our community,report it!