Monday, May 9, 2011

Physical Disability Awareness

There are positive ways of interacting with individuals with a physical disability that will not make the person feel uncomfortable or helpless, but it is to acknowledge what is acceptable and appropriate. Here are simple notions that should be put into consideration.
  • Do not base judgments on their appearance or assume that they are not able to comprehend.
  • Position yourself at the same level of the person when communicating.
  • Keep eye contact.
  • If you think the person may need assistance, ask the person first before making a gesture, but be willing to accept 'no' for an answer. Meanwhile, if they accept the assistance, make sure to ask them what they want help with.
  • When a automatic door system or push button is not available at a specific entrance, opening the door will not be taken as a discrimination, but a way to assist the person and show respect.


Reference:

Eliminating Stereotypes

Catherine Radler's article, Going Beyond the Disability - Eliminating Stereotypes, brings emphasis on professionals working with individuals with physical disabilities and ways to facilitate the helping relationship. What can hinder the helping relations is by ''using generic labels emphasizes the disability and not the uniqueness of the person'' (1999). With this regard,  Radler mentions how by referring the person by their disability or by saying a person is ''suffering'' or is a ''victim'' of a disability implies that the individual is helpless. As a professional it is important to make the clients feel strong, powerful, and confident enough to reach their goals. Meanwhile, when creating goals and objectives it is crucial for the client to be involved with this decision of what they also believe is a need that they may want to develop. Not making assumptions of what they should need, but what they truly need to facilitate integration and it will benefit them the most.


Reference:
Radler, C. (1999). Going Beyond the Disability: Eliminating Stereotypes. Received May 1, 2011, from  http://www.itforpwd.com/articles/inspirational/34-going-beyond-the-disability-eliminating-stereotypes.html

I used to be able to walk, now all my four limbs are paralyzed.

    In the article, A Survivor Speaks (2004), we are introduced to a man by the name of Dr. Avinash Pande from India, who shares his experience of how a ''road accident has disabled him''. The accident occurring in January 1999 resulted in having Dr. Pande suffer from a spinal-cord injury, which paralyzed his whole body. He now has to depend on others for all his needs and moves around on a ''servant-driven wheelchair''. He expresses how being in a wheelchair can effect the state of mind, whether it is physically or also mentally. The impact of the accident has influenced a great change in not only himself but as well as his family members. Dr. Pande also reveals how feels helpless for not being able to spend time doing leisure activities with his daughter any longer, which is another obstacle and defeat to his self esteem. The accident has forever impacted his way of life and how he functions in society and at home.  
    Car accidents do occur on a regular basis, but the impact can also be a life changing experience for many. Being physically disabled after a car accident is quite possible. When referring to Dr. Pande's story, it reveals how an average man goes from being able to walk to being wheelchair bound due to an accident the next day. Physical disabilities do not always occur at birth, but can be inflicted at any point in time in a person's life. 
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                 

Reference:
Lifeline (2004). A Survivor Speaks. Retrieved April 25, 2011 from

Monday, May 2, 2011

A person with a physical disability is handicapped by society



After interviewing two individuals with a physical disability, they both clarified how they are perceived in their society. Both mentioned that they do have a mobility limitation but that it was not there limitation that prevents them from attending certain events or going to places but rather the society. Both said that it is not all public buildings that are adapted for thier needs and also that when the building is adapted often there will be very poor service. The individuals are often put aside or left behind because they are considered ''different.'' So next time one sees an individual with a physical disabillity don't run the other way or leave them behind include them and go to places that promotes accessibility to those who may have limitations.