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Disability
is not Inability |
Disability facts
How many people live with disabilities globally?
Disability is defined by (World Health Organisation) WHO as physical,
sensory, intellectual or mental impairment.
Persons with disabilities (PWDs) make up on average 10% of the
global population (6 billion people). Difficult to assess numbers
accurately because of the different ways disability is defined,
poor data collection and poor detection systems.
Most PWDs live in the South.
Approximately 82% of PWDs live below the poverty line in developing
countries. They make up 20% of the world’s poorest people.
(EU guidance note on disability, 2002).
| In Kenya,
of the 32 Million population about three million are living
with a disability. Persons with physical disability are the
highest with over 1.3 million; Hearing impairments of various
degrees about 500,000; visual impairments of various degrees
200,000; Multiple disabilities almost 100,000; and others
comprise equally almost 100,000. |
The upsurge of mental disabilities comes
with definiton challenges and may multiply the figures significantly.
The country is undertaking a National
disability survey 2007 and specific figures with
geographical and causative distributions will be more expressed. |
Persons with disabilities lack access to health,
education, clean water and sanitation, and live in poor housing
in unsafe areas.
PWDs lives are often harder because of their impairments
– for instance in Rwanda, on average people have to walk
750 metres to get water – for someone with a mobility problem
this is v. difficult (KAR, 2005). This issue can particularly
affect children.
Disability affects not only individuals but their families
as well – particularly because of the economic
consequences.
Children with disabilities...
Estimated to be 150 - 200 million children with disabilities
in the world (out of a global population of 2 billion
children). This means that about 10% of the total population of
children is born with a disability or becomes disabled before
the age of 19.
The vast majority of children with disabilities will live without
access to health care, rehabilitation services, and education
98% of disabled children receive no formal education
– and within this - boys with disabilities are more likely
to attend schools compared with girls
In many places poverty is the direct cause of disability
through lack of prenatal care, malnutrition or lack of vaccines
– all of which can be addressed - as many as 50% of all
disabilities are preventable.
For instance, WHO estimate that as many as 1.5 million
children are blind, of which 70% of cases are preventable.
Each year 250,000 – 350,000 children are blinded by vitamin
A deficiency (which can be countered through the provision of
an oral supplement).
Mortality for children with disabilities may
be as high as 80% in countries where under five mortality as a
whole has decreased below 20%. In some cases it seems as if children
are being ‘weeded out’ (DFID, 2000)
Children involved in hazardous labour or affected
by conflict are also at greater risk of becoming disabled.
Issues for children:
Right to life, survival and development –
ensuring children with disabilities are provided with support
to live and develop to their full potential. For instance, children
with disabilities are subject to infanticide and mercy killings
– such actions are not always condemned.
Violence against children with disabilities is a key
issue – one group of researchers has reported that
90% of individuals with intellectual impairments will experience
sexual abuse, often in childhood. Disabled children are more likely
to experience violence from birth.
Stigma and prejudice are also key issues as
in many communities a child with a disability is viewed as being
born as the result of a curse, or misbehaviour of earlier generations.
This can lead to neglect (being shackled, held in small rooms
with little interaction) and lack of participation in the community
Neglect can be gender specific – with
a study from Nepal demonstrating that the survival rate for boy
children with polio was twice that for girls (polio affects equal
numbers of boys and girls).
Disabled children are often targeted by sexual predators
and can be subject to abuse and mistreatment in school.
Human Rights Watch found that death rates among
institutionalised disabled children in Eastern Europe were almost
twice that for children in the general population compared with
disabled children who live at home. In some Chinese orphanages,
where a significant proportion of all children are disabled, the
mortality rates for some children exceeds 75%
Children with disabilities are subject to a range of risks including
that of being abused and more vulnerable to HIV.
Category: Health
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