“…These include a lack of knowledge among professionals about the availability of appropriate services and supports for families (Sigurjonsdottir & Rice, 2017), but, importantly, also relate to assumptions made about the capacity of people with intellectual disabilities to parent, which often result in a crisis intervention model guided by risk (Booth & Booth, 2003;McConnell, Llewellyn, & Ferronato, 2002;Llewellyn, McConnell, Honey, Mayes, Russo, 2003). Stmadova, Bernoldova, Adamcikova, and Klusacek (2017), in a study of attitudes, knowledge and experiences of social welfare practitioners in the Czech Republic, found that most professionals held negative assumptions about the parenting capacity of parents with intellectual disabilities which then had a major impact on the support offered to them. Such attitudes suggest a presumption of incompetence, and McConnell et al (2002) argue that they promote a pessimistic approach that prevents workers from observing families' strengths and promoting family connections.…”