Beverley Samways

Fellow’s Profile

Beverley Samways

Fellow’s Profile

Beverley Samways

Intellectual disabilities and self-injury: trauma informed approaches

Fellowship

Themes

Focus

Innovating trauma-informed support for people with intellectual disabilities.

Countries

Fellowship year

2023

Supported by

Locality

West Midlands

Biography

I am the Founder of the consultancy Unique Connections, which exists to improve the lives of children and adults with intellectual disabilities who self-injure. The consultancy works with additional needs schools and care organisations to find bespoke relational, trauma-informed and emotionally literate ways forward with people presenting with entrenched self-injury and related concerns.

I have 16 years of professional experience supporting young people with severe learning disabilities, sensory loss and autism. I recently completed an ESRC-funded PhD at the University of Bristol, entitled Non-spoken stories: an ethnographic account of the emotional lives of three teenagers with severe learning disabilities who sometimes self-injured.

The purpose of my Fellowship is to discover the best trauma-informed approaches to supporting complex young people with severe intellectual disabilities, particularly those who self-injure or present with other complex behaviour. I hope that discovering best practice in this area can be translated into innovative, bespoke support for the education and care sector supporting young people with intellectual disabilities.

Activity

editorial

"If Not Us, Then Who?" Transforming Social Care

A BBC debate on the Assisted Dying Bill pushed me out of my depth – but my Churchill Fellowship had prepared me to feel the fear and do it because. What began as a modest research plan became a five-week tour across the USA, connecting with trauma institutes, service providers and experts. The relationships I built continue to shape my work today, including through Unique Connections – our growing effort to build a social care system grounded in love, belonging, and equity for people with intellectual disabilities.

By Beverley Samways, 1 May 2025

Disclaimer

All Reports are copyright © the author. The moral right of the author has been asserted. The views and opinions expressed by any Fellow are those of the Fellow and not of the Churchill Fellowship or its partners, which have no responsibility or liability for any part of them.

Activity

editorial

"If Not Us, Then Who?" Transforming Social Care

A BBC debate on the Assisted Dying Bill pushed me out of my depth – but my Churchill Fellowship had prepared me to feel the fear and do it because. What began as a modest research plan became a five-week tour across the USA, connecting with trauma institutes, service providers and experts. The relationships I built continue to shape my work today, including through Unique Connections – our growing effort to build a social care system grounded in love, belonging, and equity for people with intellectual disabilities.

By Beverley Samways, 1 May 2025

Disclaimer

All Reports are copyright © the author. The moral right of the author has been asserted. The views and opinions expressed by any Fellow are those of the Fellow and not of the Churchill Fellowship or its partners, which have no responsibility or liability for any part of them.

Contact this fellow

Fellow contact

Related

Newsletter Sign Up