Working With Diversity in Northern Ireland - for local health and social services staff providing information, practical advice, guidance and examples of best practice on equality and diversity under Section 75 legislation. Working With Diversity in Northern Ireland - for local health and social services staff providing information, practical advice, guidance and examples of best practice on equality and diversity under Section 75 legislation. Working With Diversity in Northern Ireland - for local health and social services staff providing information, practical advice, guidance and examples of best practice on equality and diversity under Section 75 legislation. Working With Diversity in Northern Ireland - for local health and social services staff providing information, practical advice, guidance and examples of best practice on equality and diversity under Section 75 legislation.
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Disability » Introduction

Introduction

Access to services is all about providing clear information, suitable routes and sufficient space to allow people to reach and use facilities. It is a human need not exclusive to disabled people.


Myths and misconceptions about disability:


Myth 
Disability is a devastating personal tragedy

Truth  
The lives of disabled people are not tragic. What often disables people is the attitudes they encounter and the environment in which they live and work


Myth  
  
Most deaf people can lip read

Truth   
For clear and efficient communication many deaf people will need services such as sign language interpreters, lip readers, lip speakers and speech to text


Myth    
Most disabled people are unable to have relationships

Truth   
Many disabled people, like non-disabled people, make choices about marriage, long-term relationships and having children


Myth    
Disabled people are dependant on others

Truth   
Some people may need help with some things – too often because of an inadequately designed environment. Nonetheless disabled people strive to be independent


Myth    
Blind people have a sixth sense

Truth   
Some people use and refine their other senses to compensate


Myth    
Disabled people are courageous

Truth   
Disabled people, like non-disabled people, cope with life in their own individual way


Myth   
Wheelchair users are not mobile

Truth  
Wheelchair users do get out and about. Some use wheelchairs generally, others only when necessary


Myth    
There are disabled people who are 'uneducable'

Truth   
Disabled people reflect the same range of academic ability as non-disabled people, with some achieving high qualifications and undertaking high level jobs
(DFEE: Employing Disabled People. A Good Practice Guide for Managers and Employers)


Facts and Statistics:

  • There are approximately 201,000 Disabled Adults in Northern Ireland.

  • 83,000 are Men.

  • 118,000 are Women.

  • 154,800 are of working age.

  • 14,600 are disabled children.

  • 33,000 people have a learning disability.

  • Disability is not always immediately obvious.

  • Disabled Persons equal 17.4% of the population in Northern Ireland as compared to 13.8% in Britain.

  • 95% of disabled people do not use wheelchairs.

  • It is often physical and attitudinal barriers which disadvantage the person more than their physical or mental impairment.

  • Very few (3%) disabled people are born with a disability.

  • Most disabled people become disabled during their working lives. 33% of over 55's have a disability.

  • 33% of people with disabilities are in employment compared to 75% of non - disabled people.

  • People with a disability are more than twice as likely to have no formal qualifications as people without disabilities.
People with a disability often face problems of social exclusion, lower income levels and difficulties with access to services and transport. They seek and are entitled to, the same independence and access to opportunities as their non disabled peers. In a survey undertaken in the early 1990's disabled people highlighted a number of their concerns, they included :
  • the opportunity to develop their abilities and interest.

  • a place to live of their own choice.

  • access to good care appropriate to their needs.

  • Support for everyday living including adequate income;

  • Participation in a wide variety of relationships.

  • Employers of disabled people have consistently found that :

  • Disabled people work as hard and are as reliable as any other employee.

  • Disabled people in work tend to have better attendance records, stay with employers longer and have fewer accidents than their non-disabled colleagues. Most disabled employees do not require adjustments at work. When required, adjustments usually cost very little.

  • People with a disability have the same rights as every-one else. These rights are protected by law in The Disability Discrimination Act of 1995 and by The Human Rights Act 1998.

  • The position of disabled people is changing, with improved technology and a more sophisticated understanding of disability, a greater number of disabled people can enjoy a full life – they can follow careers that are appropriate to their talents, and use services and buildings which are gradually becoming accessible to everyone.

Language
 

Many disabled people find the word 'handicapped' offensive as it carries connotations of 'cap in hand'. Instead say 'person with a disability' or 'disabled person'.


Medical 'labels' are undesirable and often misleading, as no two people are alike. Medical labels say little about people as individuals and tend to reinforce stereotypes of disabled people as 'patients', powerless and wholly dependent on the medical profession.

It is dehumanising to refer to a person in terms of a condition. Therefore do not talk about 'a spastic' or 'an epileptic'. Instead say 'he/she has cerebral palsy' or refer to as 'a person with epilepsy'.

Do not use the word 'disabled' as a noun i.e. 'the disabled'. It implies a homogeneous group separate from the rest of society. We are all individuals 'the disabled' do not constitute a group apart.

DO SAY
DO NOT SAY
Disabled Person
Invalid (this can be construed as 'not valid')
Person with a disability
cripple
 
spastic
 
handicapped
 
Do not use any words or phrases which invite pity, or reinforce impressions of frailty or dependence.

 
DO SAY
DO NOT SAY
Person who has/person with/person who has experienced
Victim of/crippled by/suffering from/afflicted by  
 
Remember that a wheelchair can represent freedom to its user.
 
 
DO SAY
DO NOT SAY
wheelchair user
wheelchair bound  
person who uses a wheelchair'
describe someone as 'confined' to a wheelchair

Many people dislike the term mental handicap, which is both stigmatising and imprecise. People with an intellectual disability are voicing their preferences through the growing self-advocacy movement, and they prefer to be described as 'people with learning difficulties'

 
DO SAY
DO NOT SAY
People with learning difficulties
Mongol
 
Mental handicap
 
Retarded
 
DO SAY
DO NOT SAY
Mental health difficulties
Mental
 
Nutters
 
 
Remember that there are differing levels of deafness and blindness.

DO SAY
DO NOT SAY
Deaf, partially deaf, deafened, hard of hearing
deaf and dumb
 
deaf-mute
 
Do not refer to a person in terms of a named medical condition and never refer
to a person in a word ending in “ic”.

 
DO SAY
DO NOT SAY
Person who has/with arthritis
Arthritic
Person who has/with epilepsy
Epileptic
Person who has/with diabetes
Diabetic
 
 
DO SAY
DO NOT SAY
Person of short stature
Dwarf
Person of restricted growth
Midget

  
(Source: Focus Consultancy Service “Focusing on Best Practice” Disability Awareness in the Customer Care Context. Focus Project – Disability Action)


See Link to Dependants.

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