DIRE DAWA University
College of Education and Behavioral Studies
Department of Special Needs Education
Inclusiveness
DIRE DAWA University
Chapter 3
Identification of the Impact
of Disability and
Differentiated Services
3.1. The Impact of Disability and
Vulnerability on Daily Life
•People respond to disabilities in different ways. Some react
negatively.
•Thus, in this situation the quality of life of PWDs will be
negatively affected.
•Others prefer to focus on their abilities as opposed to their
disabilities and continue to live a productive life.
•There are several factors that affect and impact of the life an
individual with disability.
•The following are considered as the most known factors in
determining the impact of disability on an individual.
3.1.1.The Nature of impairment
• Impairment can be acquired as a result of an
accident, or disease that may be congenital or
acquired (pre-natal, or post-natal).
• If the impairment is acquired, it is more likely
to cause a negative reaction than a congenital
impairment.
• The acquired impairment requires more
rehabilitation service than the congenital ones.
3.1.2. The Individual’s Personality
• The individual personality can be typically
positive or negative, dependent or
independent, goal-oriented or laissez-faire.
• Someone with a positive outlook is more likely
to embrace impairment then someone with a
negative outlook.
• Someone who is independent will continue to
be independent and someone who is goal-
oriented will continue to set and pursue goals.
3.1.3. The Meaning of the
impairment to the Individual
• Does the individual define
himself/herself by his/her looks or
physical characteristics?
• If so, he/she is more likely to feel
defined by his/her impairment and thus
it will have a negative impact.
3.1.4. The Individual’s Current Life
Circumstances
• The influence of this situation manifests through the following
factors:
The condition that the individual is independent or
dependent on others (parents) in his/her living;
The economic and academic status of the individual with
disability or his/her caregivers;
If the individuals with impairments are happy with their
current life circumstance, they are more likely to embrace
their impairment, whereas, if they are not happy with their
circumstances, they often blame their impairment.
3.1.5. The Individual's Support System
The individual’s support from family, a significant
other, friends, or social groups contribute to
minimize the impact of impairment on their overall
personality
Common effects of impairment/disability may include:
Limited to health conditions of the person;
Mental health issues including anxiety and
depression;
Loss of freedom and independence;
Frustration and anger at having to rely on
other people;
practical problems including transport;
Choice of activities;
Accessing buildings;
Unemployment;
Problems with learning and academic study;
Loss of self-esteem and confidence
especially in social situations.
• But most of these negative effects do exist due to restricted
environments, not as a result of direct impact of the
impairment.
• Persons with disabilities are diverse and heterogeneous,
while stereotypical views of disability emphasize wheelchair
users and a few other “classic” groups such as blind people
and deaf people.
• Disability encompasses the child born with a congenital
condition such as cerebral palsy or the young soldier who
loses his leg to a land-mine, or the middle-aged woman with
severe arthritis, or the older person with dementia, among
many others.
• Health conditions can be visible or invisible; temporary or
long term; static, episodic, or degenerating; painful or
inconsequential.
• Note that many people with disabilities do not consider
themselves to be unhealthy.
• Persons with disabilities have diverse personal factors with
differences in gender, age, language, socioeconomic status,
sexuality, ethnicity, or cultural heritage.
• Women with disabilities experience the combined
disadvantages associated with gender as well as disability,
and may be less likely to marry than non-disabled women.
• People who experience mental health conditions or
intellectual impairments and severe/multiple impairment
appear to be more disadvantaged in many settings than
those who experience physical or sensory impairments.
3.1.6. Economic Factors and Disability
• There is clear evidence that people living with poverty are
exposed to health problems that may cause impairment
and disabling environment.
• This is true even in advanced economies.
• The impact of absolute or relative economic deprivation
on the onset of pathology crosscuts conditions with
radically different etiologies, encompassing infectious
diseases and most common chronic conditions.
• The lack of resources can adversely affect the ability of an
individual to function with a disabling condition.
• For example, someone with an amputated leg who has little
money or poor health insurance may not be able to obtain a
proper prosthesis, in which case the absence of the limb
may then force the individual to withdraw from jobs that
require these capacities.
• Similarly, economic resources can limit the options and
abilities of someone who requires personal assistance
services or certain physical accommodations.
• The individual also may not be able to access the
appropriate rehabilitation services to reduce the degree of
potential disability either because they cannot afford the
services themselves or cannot afford the cost of specialized
transportation services.
• The advanced economy of the communities and the country
at large significantly make available enabling environment in
infrastructure, public services and job opportunities for the
participation of PWDs.
• In the countries having advanced economy, governments
may apply disability compensation policy.
3.1.7. Political Factors and Disability
• The political system, through its role in designing public
policy, can and does have a profound impact on the extent
to which impairments and other potentially disabling
conditions will result in disability.
• If the political system is well enforced it will profoundly
improve the prospects of people with disabling
conditions for achieving a much fuller participation in
society, in effect reducing the font of disability in work
and every other domain of human activity.
• Thus, the political good will of the government that
manifests at policy and implementation level creates
enabling environment for full and effective participation
of PWDs in all aspects of life of the society by reducing
the impact of the impairment and forms of impediments.
3.1.8. Psychological Factors of Disability
• There are five constructs that may result in psychological
influence on the psychological makeup of PWDs in reference
to disabling conditions.
I. Social Cognitive Processes
• Cognition consists of thoughts, feelings, beliefs, and
ways of viewing the world, others, and ourselves.
• Three interrelated cognitive processes have been selected
to illustrate the direct and interactive effects of cognition
on disability.
• These are self-efficacy beliefs, psychological control, and
coping patterns which all these are socially constructed.
II. Self-Efficacy Beliefs
• Self-efficacy beliefs are concerned with whether or not
a person believes that he or she can accomplish a desired
outcome (Bandura, 1977, 1986).
III. Psychological Control
• Psychological control, or control beliefs, is akin to self-
efficacy beliefs in that they beliefs regarding one's ability
to exert control or change a situation.
IV. Coping Patterns
• Coping patterns refer to behavioral and cognitive efforts
to manage specific internal or external demands that tax
or exceed a person's resources to adjust.
V. Personality Disposition
• Optimism in contrast to pessimism is the general
tendency to view the world, others, and oneself
favorably.
• People with an optimistic orientation rather than a
pessimistic orientation are far better across
several dimensions.
• Optimists tend to have better self-esteem and less
hostility towards others and tend to use more
adaptive coping strategies than pessimists.
3.1.9. The Family and Disability
•The family can be either an enabling or a disabling factor
for a person with a disabling condition.
•Although most people have a wide network of friends, the
networks of people with disabilities are more likely to be
dominated by family members.
•Even among people with disabilities who maintain a large
network of friends, family relationships often are most
central and families often provide the main sources of
support.
•This support may be informational (providing advice or
referrals), or emotional (giving love and support).
• Families can also fulfill their responsibilities in
meeting the special needs of their children with
disabilities by making available specialized services
and assistive devices and technologies
• It is important to note, however, that families may
also be disabling.
• Some families promote dependency.
• Others fatalistically accept functional limitations and
conditions that are amenable to change with a
supportive environment.
• In both of these situations, the person with the
potentially disabling condition is not allowed to
develop to his or her fullest potential.
• Families may also not provide needed
environmental services and resources.
• For example, families of deaf children frequently
do not learn to sign, in the process impeding their
children's ability to communicate as effectively as
possible.
3.2. Special Needs of Persons with
Disabilities and other Vulnerable Groups
• The special needs of PWDs are emanated from different
factors.
• These are:
- Personal experience of individuals with impairments;
- Type of the impairment;
- Severity /degree of the impairment; and
- Onset of the impairment.
• Hence, professionals as per their discipline should give
response differently to the needs of PWDs considering these
realities.
•Analyzing the human beings, Maslow has identified five
categories of needs, with different priority levels, in the following
order:
- Survival (physiological);
- Safety;
- Social needs;
- Esteem; and
- Self-actualization (fulfillment).
•Maslow’s model is also valid for persons with disabilities and other
vulnerable groups, whose needs are regular and or similar to
those of ordinary persons.
•It is obvious that survival is a priority need for PWDs due to the
existing disabling condition such as lack of opportunity for
personal hygiene, feeding and Adaptive Daily Living skills ( ADL).
Abraham’s Maslow Hierarchy
• Persons with disabilities and other vulnerable groups
have socio-emotional, psychological, physical and
social environmental and economic needs in general.
• However, the following are the basic and special
needs of PWDs and other vulnerable groups needed
to be available to ensure their equal participation in
all activities of the society:
- Full access to the environment (towns,
countryside & buildings);
- Accessible transport system;
- Technical aids and equipment;
- Accessible/adapted housing;
- Personal assistance and support;
- Inclusive education and training;
- Adequate income;
- Equal opportunity for employment;
- Appropriate and accessible information;
- Advocacy (towards their human right);
- Counseling;
- Appropriate and accessible health care;
- Assistive appliances.
3.2.1. Belongingness and disability
•Family relationships as a means of connecting to
community and being known by others, and knowing
others outside the family are important.
•Different kinds of relationship contributed to this
sense of belonging, ranging from the more superficial
nodding acquaintances to specific informal support
from known others, to the intimacy of close friends
and kin.
• Historically for people with disabilities, rurality was once
the site of exclusion, rather than belonging, where
identity and gender were disregarded in favor of
ensuring protection of people with disabilities and of the
society in which they lived.
• People with disabilities and marginalized groups feel
isolated.
• Some persons with disabilities have actively sought to
migrate to urban environments, to escape from the
confines and constraints of small rural environments and
to build broader social networks away from the farm.
3.3. Disability Inclusive Intervention and
Rehabilitation Services
• A ‘One-size-fits-all’ approach to provide services for
persons with disabilities and vulnerable groups is no
longer enough.
• Including people with disabilities in everyday activities
and encouraging them to have roles similar to peoples
who do not have a disability is disability inclusion.
• This involves more than simply encouraging people; it
requires making sure that adequate policies and
practices are in effect in a community or organization.
• Inclusion should lead to increased participation of PWDs
in socially expected life roles and activities such as:
being a student, worker, friend, community member,
patient, spouse, partner, or parent.
• Disability inclusion means provision of differentiated
services for persons with disabilities and other
vulnerable groups.
• Differentiated service means a multiple service delivery
model that can satisfy the most needs of persons with
disabilities and other vulnerable groups.
• This includes the availability of accommodative
public services in infrastructure, health care,
education, social protection etc.
• Persons with disabilities and other vulnerable groups
are often excluded (either directly or indirectly) from
development processes and humanitarian action
because of physical, attitudinal and institutional
barriers.
• The effects of this exclusion are increased inequality,
discrimination and marginalization.
3.3.1. Definition and components of
Rehabilitation Intervention
• Rehabilitation is a process designed to optimize function and
improve the quality of life of those with disabilities.
• There are general underlying concepts and theories of
rehabilitation interventions.
• Examples of these theories and concepts include movement
and motor control, human occupation models, education and
learning, health promotion and prevention of additional and
secondary health conditions, neural control and central
nervous system plasticity, pain modulation, development
and maturation, coping and adjustment, biomechanics,
linguistics and pragmatics, resiliency and self-reliance,
auditory processing, and behavior modification.
• The conduct of rehabilitation intervention is not a simple
process. It involves multiple participants, and it can take on
many forms.
• The following is a description of the individual components
that, when combined, comprise the process and activity of
rehabilitation:
Multiple Disciplines;
Physicians;
Occupational Therapists;
Physical Therapists;
Speech and Language Therapist;
Audiologists;
Rehabilitation Nurses;
Social Workers;
Case Managers;
Rehabilitation Psychologists;
Neuropsychologists;
Therapeutic Recreation Specialists;
Rehabilitation Counselors;
Orthotists and Prosthetists;
Additional Rehabilitation Professionals;
Persons with the Disability and His or Her
Family;
Community Based Rehabilitation Workers.
3.3.2. Strategies to Disability Inclusive Intervention and
Rehabilitation
A)Prevention
•This includes primary Prevention (Action intended to avoid the causes of
impairment), Secondary prevention (Early Intervention) and tertiary prevention
(Rehabilitation).
B) Implementing the Twin-track Approach
•One of the strategies relevant for the implementation of inclusion in terms of
disability is Twin-track approach.
•The twin-track approach involves:
(1) Ensuring all mainstream programs and services are inclusive
and accessible to persons with disabilities and other vulnerable groups time;
and
(2) Providing targeted disability-specific support to persons with
disabilities.
C) Implement Disability Inclusive Project/ Program
•As public service provider all sectorial strategies, program,
projects and services must be disability-inclusive.
•The sectors operations should be largely framed within broad
programs, making it very important to ensure that disability
inclusion is reflected in program strategies and design
documents.
•This in turn ensures the mainstreaming and implementation
of disability issues at program level.
•However, persons with disabilities are often not considered in
crucial stages of most sectorial and developmental program
and projects because of lack of awareness about the special
needs of people with disabilities, and other vulnerable groups.
• The following tips will help to overcome the challenges as
key considerations for including persons with disabilities in
all program and project cycle management stages of
Assessment, Planning, Implementation and Monitoring, and
Reporting/Evaluation:
Education and vocational training;
Health;
Relief and social services;
Infrastructure and camp improvement, shelter, water
and sanitation and environmental health;
Livelihoods, employment and microfinance;
Protection;
Humanitarian and emergency response.
D)Community Based Rehabilitation (CBR)
• Community Based Rehabilitation (CBR) is a strategy
crafted for developing countries with an intention to
bringing children with disabilities who are kept at
home to public services such as: education, self-
employment, health care etc. through providing
them multi-dimensional home-based rehabilitation
services.
• For this purpose, there is a need to recruit and
deploy CBR workers from and within the local
communities respectively.
E) Inclusiveness and Assistive Technology
•There are various organizational definitions for
assistive technology:
The international standard ISO 9999 defines
AT (referring to AT as “technical aid”) as “any
product, instrument, equipment or technical system
used by a disabled person, especially produced or
generally available, preventing, compensating,
monitoring, relieving or neutralizing the impairment,
disability or handicap”.
• For persons with disabilities and other vulnerable
groups, technological developments such as the
proliferation of the internet and the provision of
services for accessing digital television such as audio
description (video description), closed signing, and
the availability of subtitles (captions) in live
broadcasts enabled by speech-to text technologies
can make an important contribution to facilitating
independent living.
• Technologies promote independence for people with
disabilities and other vulnerable groups.
• The use of devices, computers, robots, and other established
assistive technology (AT) can potentially increase the
autonomy of people with disabilities and other vulnerable
groups, by compensating for physical limitations and
circumventing difficulties with normal activities of daily living
(ADL).
• In modern societies, persons with disabilities, and other
marginalized and other vulnerable groups can attain some
components of wellbeing such as access to services using
assistive technology (AT).
• Other components, such as freedom of navigation and
travel, are much more difficult because of environmental
obstacles encountered by the disabled.
• Surgery, generic therapy, rehabilitation, human
assistance, and the use of assistive technology (AT)
help disabled people cope with their disabilities.
• Unfortunately, such assistance is not always
available and not necessarily cost-effective.
• AT can increase the autonomy, independence, and
quality of life for Persons with disabilities and other
vulnerable groups and can also enable the
integration of social, professional, and environmental
aspects of life for Persons with disabilities and other
vulnerable groups.
• Assistive technology affords Persons with disabilities
and other vulnerable groups’ greater equality of
opportunity, by enhancing and expanding their
communication, learning, participation, and
achievement with higher levels of independence,
wellbeing, and quality of life.
• Assistive Technology varies from low-tech devices
such as a cane or adapted loop, to high-tech systems
such as assistive robotics or smart spaces.
• Assistive technology encompasses all systems that
are designed for Persons with disabilities and other
vulnerable groups, and that attempt to compensate
the handicapped.
3.4. Implement Inclusive Job Opportunities
and Employment
• The right to work is fundamental to being a full and equal
member of society, and it applies to all persons, regardless
of whether or not they have a disability.
• A decent job in the open labor market is a key bulwark
against poverty.
• It also enables people to build self-esteem, form social
relationships, and to gain skills and knowledge.
• Despite the fact that the majority of jobs can be performed
by individuals with disabilities, the pathways to their
employment are often strewn with barriers.
• Studies indicated that there is high rate of unemployment
within working age PWDs compared with non-disabled
productive forces even in industrialized countries.
• Most of PWDs and other vulnerable groups are forced to
work in informal works without legal contract and job
security.
• Even when persons with disabilities are formally employed,
they are more likely to be in low-paid, low-level positions
with poor prospects for career development.
• The recently adopted 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development calls on governments around the world to
promote full employment and decent work for all, including
persons with disabilities and other vulnerable groups.
• Persons with disabilities may be prevented from working due
to the following barriers:
Inaccessible transportation services;
Lack of accessible information and communications
services;
Preference of employers for candidates without
disabilities;
Legal stipulations that prevent individuals with particular
impairments from working in certain fields;
Discouragement of family and community members;
Lack of opportunity to education and vocational training
to meet the requirements of labor market;
Benefit trap.
• The following are key strategies needed for the promotion of
job opportunity for PWDs and other vulnerable groups.
Anti-Discrimination Legislation;
Vocational Education and Training;
Wage Subsidies;
Workplace Accommodation Schemes;
Workers’ Compensation;
Quota Systems;
Sheltered Workshops;
Private Sector Initiatives;
Employer Networks;
Support Disability-Inclusive Business;
Support Persons with Disabilities in the Workplace;
Building a More Inclusive Society;
Improve Data Collection on Disability and Employment.
• Regardless of those challenges that may affect the stamina
and motivation of PWDs, studies confirmed that PWDs
seriously want to work to:
Livelihood;
Ensure their social contacts; and
Develop their self-esteem.
Activities
1.Do you believe that PWDs have the same need? Why?
2. Why intervention is needed for PWDs and other vulnerable
groups?
3.What is rehabilitation? And why and for whom it is needed?