
Justice for Laughing Boy
connor sparrowhawk - a death by indifference
$43.37
- Paperback
272 pages
- Release Date
14 October 2017
Summary
Justice for Laughing Boy: A Mother’s Fight for Accountability
On July 4th, 2013, Connor Sparrowhawk, affectionately known as Laughing Boy or LB, tragically died in an NHS specialist unit. Connor, who lived with autism and epilepsy, suffered a seizure while in the bath, but no staff member was present to prevent him from drowning. His death was entirely preventable.
Sara Ryan shares a raw, occasionally humorous, and deeply moving story of her son’s life and tragic, preventabl…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781785923487 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 178592348X |
| Author: | Sara Ryan |
| Publisher: | Jessica Kingsley Publishers |
| Imprint: | Jessica Kingsley Publishers |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 272 |
| Release Date: | 14 October 2017 |
| Weight: | 288g |
| Dimensions: | 214mm x 140mm x 22mm |
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What They're Saying
Critics Review
Anyone who cares about patient safety and fairness should read this book. It will make you cry, it will make you laugh, it will make you think, and I would be amazed if it did not make you passionate about changing things. – Peter Walsh, Chief Executive, Action against Medical Accidents (AvMA)A salutary lesson on what happens when public services lose their heart and forget that they exist to serve the public and, in particular, be part of addressing the prejudices and disadvantage that are inherent in our society. – Rob Greig CBE, Chief Executive, National Development Team for InclusionThe heart of this story rises above a narrative of private grief and public failure by offering a powerful eulogy to the sheer force of love, especially the personality and character of Connor Sparrowhawk that helped inspire a social movement for truth, justice and accountability. Everyone committed to accountable public services should read this book and learn from it. – Richard Humphries, Senior Fellow, The King’s FundThis brilliantly written book is so many things. It’s a story of love and loss, a story of people dying preventable deaths because our society doesn’t care enough, a story of how what started as one family’s battle for accountability turned into a social movement. – Dr Jenny Morris OBE, Visiting Professor of Social Work and Social Policy and policy analystThe echoes of those who no longer speak… no candy coating, it is what it is; a tragedy born from negligence. To quote: ‘At the heart of this story is love’. Love ‘mobilised a social movement’ and love keeps hope alive. Not a good read, a must read. – Dr Wenn B. Lawson, lecturer and authorThis is, rightly, a book which makes difficult reading for anyone professionally invested in any part of the system - for exactly the same reasons, it should make compulsory reading. – Alex Ruck Keene, barrister, writer and educator, 39 Essex ChambersA truly remarkable book that should never have had to be written, and that should be read by literally anyone who cares about their fellow human being; Sara brings beauty to her narrative, juxtaposed to the brutal ugliness of the subject matter, juxtaposed to the heart wrenching loving memory of a son taken from his family before his time. An emotional roller coaster made even more poignant by reason that the text is so tragically not fictional. – Dr Luke Beardon, Senior Lecturer in Autism, Sheffield Hallam University and authorThis is a story that needs to reach as wide an audience as possible. Only then will people such as Connor receive the care and protection they are entitled to. – Gail McKeitch, parent of two sons with autism, one of whom also has epilepsyThis is a book that should never have needed to be written - young “dudes” like Connor should not die untimely deaths and families should not have to fight for justice. However, it is a book that most definitely needs to be read and used to effect change – Ruth Northway OBE FRCN PFHE, Professor of Learning Disability Nursing, University of South WalesThis account of a parent’s experience brings to light the vital need to really listen, understand and work alongside people with learning disabilities and their families to ensure that care and support is right for them. – Lyn Romeo, Chief Social Worker for AdultsThis is a beautifully written and deeply moving account of a mother’s love for her son. It is a book about how a social movement, inspired by the quest for justice, continues to seek accountability and change following Connor Sparrowhawk’s needless death. This book deserves to be read widely and for people to take action from it. #JusticeForLB – Rhidian Hughes, Voluntary Organisations Disability GroupA searingly powerful book. – Sarah Holmes MBE, Patient AdvocateWhat happened to Connor shows that people with learning disabilities are still not treated as human beings like everyone else. Professionals need to listen to people with learning disabilities and their families and friends about what their care should be. – Gary Bourlet, Founder of Learning Disability England and self-advocate of learning disabled rights
About The Author
Sara Ryan
Dr Sara Ryan is a social scientist at the University of Oxford, specialising in autism and learning disabilities. Her blog, ‘My Daft Life’, started before Connor’s death, and continues to document the events that followed.
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