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Special needs education in Uganda : a study of implementation of the policy on provision of education for children with 'mental retardation'Okech, John Baptist Olweny January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Youth multilingualism and discourses of disability: An intersectional approachRichardson, Jason January 2018 (has links)
Magister Artium - MA / Disability, as a topic of investigation, is considerably overlooked in the discipline of
sociolinguistics. This thesis aims to bridge the gap between disability and
sociolinguistics studies, as I critically explore the role language and multilingualism
plays in the way we understand and construct the discourses of disability.
Based on a year-long ethnographic study at what is defined as a “special needs school”,
I offer a first-hand description of being a researcher with a disability through personal
anecdotes. In these anecdotes, I account for my own positionality to highlight the
importance of reflectivity and positionality when doing ethnographic fieldwork. Aside
from these personal anecdotes, I also capture everyday interactions among young
disabled people. In order to analyse these disabled youth multilingual interactions, I
applied the notions of stylization, enregisterment and embodied intersectionality. In
these examinations, we are able to see how multilingualism is used to negotiate a
position of being seen as disabled. By looking at these personal anecdotes and everyday
interactions as whole, the study provides a more comprehensive view of the way we
talk and represent disability. I conclude this thesis by offering a new direction for
disability and youth multilingualism studies, a direction that emphasises the importance
of positionality when doing research on the agency of disabled people.
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Factors associated with drug shortages in PHC facilities in the Mopani district of the Limpopo provinceMatse, Patrick Muzi 10 November 2006 (has links)
Faculty of Health Sciencs
School of Public Health
961299p
muzi@hst.org.za / Most leading causes of death and disability in developing countries can be prevented,
treated, or at least alleviated with cost effective essential drugs. However, hundreds of
millions of people do not have regular access to essential drugs despite the fact that
essential drugs can prevent many deaths.
The aim of this study was to determine factors associated with essential drugs
shortages in Primary Health Care (PHC) facilities (i.e. clinics and community health
centres) in Mopani District in the Limpopo Province. Forty-five facilities were
selected by means of stratified (by sub-district) random sampling. Forty-five
professional nurses, who were in charge of the facility on the day of the interviews,
were interviewed. A structured questionnaire was used for the data collection. Six
pharmacists, from the six hospitals that supply drugs to the PHC facilities, were
interviewed using a structured questionnaire. A one-on-one informal interview was
held with 2 Hospital Superintendents and the Acting Provincial Chief Pharmaceutical
Director. The study was both a retrospective and prospective observational study
based on review of historical data, interviews with key players and direct observation
of current practice. The tools used to collect and analyse the data were based on those
developed by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the Health Systems Trust
(HST) with some adjustments and adaptation.
The District STI Quality of Care (DISCA) Tool was used in the other thirty-six
facilities, at which the structured questionnaire was not administered, to test
prescribing indicators in relation to diagnosis, the correctness of and dosage of drugs
dispensed and also drugs availability.
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Characteristics associated with bone mineral density screening in a sample of adults with intellectual disabilitiesDreyfus, Deborah Elizabeth January 2012 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Boston University / PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authorization To Manage form for this thesis or dissertation. It is therefore not openly accessible, though it may be available by request. If you are the author or principal advisor of this work and would like to request open access for it, please contact us at open-help@bu.edu. Thank you. / Adults with Intellectual Disability (ID) are at an elevated risk of osteoporosis based on lower peak bone mass and medical characteristics. However, there is little data as to how the medical characteristics affect screening or at what ages people are being screened. Methods: A secondary cross-sectional data analysis of was conducted of 4777 adults witl1 Intellectual Disability to determine characteristics associated with an elevated risk for osteoporosis and receipt of bone density screening. Hypotheses were that increasing age, use of antiseizure medication, living in a 24 hour residential setting, and receiving a flu vaccine increased the likelihood of screening. Bivariate analyses were initially performed, tl1en data were stratified by gender and logistic regressions were performed. Findings: 22.2% of the sample in this study received bone density screening. Bivariate odds ratios identified each of the hypothesized variables as significantly associated with receiving screening. Additionally, many of the covariates analyzed identified significant associations with receiving screening.Data were then stratified by gender and evaluated in a logistic regression. In men, increasing age, tl1e use of antiepileptic medication (adjusted odds ratio (OR) 1.5; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.2-2.0), and receiving the flu vaccine (adjusted OR 1.5; 95% CI 1.2-2.0) were associated witl1 an increased likelihood of screening, controlling for confounding. Living in a 24 hour residential setting was not significantly associated with screening (adjusted OR 1.2; 95% CI 0.91-1.6). In women, increasing age, the use of antiepileptic medication (adjusted OR 1.5; 95% CI 1.2-1.9), receiving the flu vaccine (adjusted OR 1.4; 95% CI 1.1-1.8), and living in a 24 hour residential setting (adjusted OR 1.4; 95% CI 1.1 -1.8) were all significantly associated with receiving screening. A history of Down syndrome, noted to increase risk of osteoporosis, was associated with a decreased likehl1ood of screening (adjusted OR 0.67; 95% CI 0.4 7-0. 94) in women, although it was not a significant association in men. Conclusions: While most variables related to osteoporosis are associated with an increased likelihood of screening, screening rates among in adults witl1 ID were low. Additionally, men and women have differences in variables related to screening. Better education and improved awareness may increase rates. / 2031-01-02
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Employing Persons with Disabilities in MadagascarRatsifandrihamanana, Lila H. 25 January 2019 (has links)
<p> In Madagascar, the barriers to persons with disabilities’ employability are multifaceted and relate to accessibility, funding, attitudes, and policies. Managers lack knowledge on disability and still perceive disabled persons as incompetent and associate them with costly accommodation needs. The purpose of this qualitative case study was to examine the management strategies and leadership styles that managers could use to enhance the employability chances of persons with disabilities. The conceptual framework featured the concepts of empowerment, employability, disability identity, and relevant transformational leadership theories. Semistructured interviews were conducted with 28 managers in private companies, institutions, cooperatives, and organizations in 3 regions of Madagascar. Data analysis was done with open hand coding and using NVivo 12 software. Key findings related to enabling management strategies that included promoting fair recruitment, tailoring jobs to disabled workers’ competences and health conditions, ensuring communication and reasonable accommodation. The study revealed the merit of an inclusive transformational leadership in fostering the employability of persons with disabilities, through coaching, in-training supports, compassion and kinship, motivation, and trust building. The study benefits managers who could better attend to disabled workers’ vocational needs. The study contributes to positive changes by influencing attitude change within the workplace and the community that could pave the way to an inclusive society in which disabled people could enjoy their rights to work.</p><p>
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Resilience and vulnerability in siblings of children with chronic illness or disabilityRayner, Meredith, n/a January 2007 (has links)
The focus of this research is the stress placed on a child when a sibling in the family has
a chronic illness or disability, and analysis of what factors may buffer this stress and be
associated with well child resilience in the face of family illness. Several major studies
from other countries (Cadman, Boyle, & Offord, 1988; Houtzager, Grootenhuis, Caron
& Last, 2005; Laufersweiler-Plass, Rudnik-Schoneborn, Zerres, Backes, Lehmkuhl &
von Gontart, 2003; Sharpe & Rossiter, 2002; Williams, Williams, Graff, Hanson et al.,
2002) suggest that there may be deleterious outcomes for well children in such families,
for example higher rates of anxiety, depression, aggressive behaviour and rule
breaking behaviour. However there is a lack of clarity about the processes which lead
to these negative outcomes. The current study had two major research aims. The first
was to describe social, family and personal characteristics of a group of well children
with siblings who have a chronic illness or disability. The second aim was to examine
relationships between adjustment problems in these well children and factors relating to
the family (income, number of children in family, respite availability and utilisation),
parents (stress, parenting style, maternal education, access to support) and children (ill
child behaviour, amount of care required, well child age, well and ill child participation
in social activities). Adjustment in well-children (n=102) was assessed using child self
report, child projective and parent rating measures. Parents rated well children with ill
siblings as significantly higher in externalising and internalising behaviour than age and
gender matched population norms. Children did not rate their behaviour problems
higher than norms but did indicate quite high rates of emotional problems on a
projective (drawing) test. Parent-rated behaviours of well children were associated with
parental, family and ill child variables, including (high) parental stress (daily hassles),
(low) family income and (high) ill child internalising and externalising behaviours.
Relationships between the well child's perception of having a sibling with a chronic
illness or disability and various parent, child and family variables were also explored.
Well children who listed more negative (than positive) attributes about having a sibling
with a chronic illness were more aggressive and rule breaking in their behaviour. Well
children with emotional problems, as assessed by the child family drawings, did not
differ significantly from children without emotional problems in any of the parent, child
or family variables however both the emotional problems index and the use of scribble
drawings were associated with several measures of well child maladjustment. The
results were discussed in terms of family systems and resilience theory. Implications
for well children and their families including practical applications for existing
interventions which target well children, ill siblings and parents were discussed and
ideas for future directions for interventions to improve outcomes for well siblings were
presented.
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Computational case-based redesign for people with ability impairment: Rethinking, reuse and redesign learning for home modification practiceBridge, Catherine Elizabeth Unknown Date (has links)
Home modification practice for people with impairments of ability involves redesigning existing residential environments as distinct from the creation of a new dwelling. A redesigner alters existing structures, fittings and fixtures to better meet the occupant�s ability requirements. While research on case-based design reasoning and healthcare informatics are well documented, the reasoning and process of redesign and its integration with individual human functional abilities remains poorly understood. Developing a means of capturing redesign knowledge in the form of case documentation online provides a means for integrating and learning from individual case-based redesign episodes where assessment and interventions are naturally linked. A key aim of the research outlined in this thesis was to gain a better understanding of the redesign of spaces for individual human ability with the view to computational modelling. Consequently, the foundational knowledge underpinning the model development includes design, redesign, case-based building design and human functional ability. Case-based redesign as proposed within the thesis, is a method for capturing the redesign context, the residential environment, the modification and the transformational knowledge involved in the redesign. Computational simulation methods are traditionally field dependent. Consequently, part of the research undertaken within this thesis involved the development of a framework for analysing cases within an online case-studies library to validate redesign for individuals and a method of acquiring reuse information so as to be able to estimate the redesign needs of a given population based on either their environment or ability profile. As home modification for people with functional impairments was a novel application field, an explorative action-based methodological approach using computational modelling was needed to underpin a case-based reasoning method. The action-based method involved a process of articulating and examining existing knowledge, suggesting new case-based computational practices, and evaluating the results. This cyclic process led to an improvement cycle that included theory, computational tool development and practical application. The rapid explosion of protocols and online redesign communities that utilise Web technologies meant that a web-based prototype capable of acquiring cases directly from home modification practitioners online and in context was both desirable and achievable. The first online version in 1998-99, encoded home modification redesigns using static WebPages and hyperlinks. This motivated the full-scale more dynamic and robust HMMinfo casestudies prototype whose action-based development is detailed within this thesis. The home modification casestudies library results from the development and integration of a novel case-based redesign model in combination with a Human- Activity-Space computational ontology. These two models are then integrated into a relational database design to enable online case acquisition, browsing, case reuse and redesign learning. The application of the redesign ontology illustrates case reuse and learning, and presents some of the implementation issues and their resolution. Original contributions resulting from this work include: extending case-based design theory to encompass redesign and redesign models, distinguishing the importance of human ability in redesign and the development of the Human-Activity-Space ontology. Additionally all data models were combined and their associated inter-relationships evaluated within a prototype made available to redesign practitioners. v Reflective and practitioner based evaluation contributed enhanced understanding of redesign case contribution dynamics in an online environment. Feedback from redesign practitioners indicated that gaining informed consent to share cases from consumers of home modification and maintenance services, in combination with the additional time required to document a case online, and reticence to go public for fear of critical feedback, all contributed to a less than expected case library growth. This is despite considerable interest in the HMMinfo casestudies website as evidenced by web usage statistics. Additionally the redesign model described in this thesis has practical implications for all design practitioners and educators who seek to create new work by reinterpreting, reconstructing and redesigning spaces.
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Brukarorganisationers syn på ICF som arbetsredskap – och dess betydelse för erkännande och omfördelningTalman, Lena January 2009 (has links)
<p>This study was about disability organisations opinion concerning ICF: s importance in their work to receive the same recognition and human rights for their members as citizens. The aim has been to elucidate disability organisations awareness about and use/non use of ICF and to increase the understanding of ICF: s importance for recognition and redistribution. Three different methods have been used: literature study, questionnaire survey, both on counties' (27) - and national (26) level and interviews (5) on national level. There is also a distinct difference between the disability organisations that represents people with visible impairments, who don’t think that ICF is so useful and they that represent people with invisible impairments, who thinks that ICF is a useful tool. This difference exists both in the use of ICF and the classifications importance for recognition but not ICF: s importance for redistribution. The main conclusion of the study is that awareness about and education around ICF is needed among disability organisations. A restructuring of ICF is also needed, the language should be simplified and the codes should be faded down so that the focus will be on ICF: s intention and the mind map that the classification offers. This is also necessary so that ICF becomes accessible for everybody.</p>
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Pension Eligibility and Retirement Behavior : Did the 1979 Swedish pension reform affect immigrant retirement behavior?Ohlson, Mikael January 2004 (has links)
We examine the effects of changed eligibility rules to disability pension by the 1979 Swedish pension reform on immigrant retirement behavior. The reform made disability pension in the form of basic pension available to a wider group of immigrants. By using the LINDA database in a “difference-in-difference” model we estimate the effects of the reform on the probability of retirement in the age group 40-64. We find a positive impact of the reform on immigrant retirement behavior among women. Our results also indicate that naturalization may have been a way to get access to disability pension for those who, before the reform, had no legal right to basic pension.
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Brukarorganisationers syn på ICF som arbetsredskap – och dess betydelse för erkännande och omfördelningTalman, Lena January 2009 (has links)
This study was about disability organisations opinion concerning ICF: s importance in their work to receive the same recognition and human rights for their members as citizens. The aim has been to elucidate disability organisations awareness about and use/non use of ICF and to increase the understanding of ICF: s importance for recognition and redistribution. Three different methods have been used: literature study, questionnaire survey, both on counties' (27) - and national (26) level and interviews (5) on national level. There is also a distinct difference between the disability organisations that represents people with visible impairments, who don’t think that ICF is so useful and they that represent people with invisible impairments, who thinks that ICF is a useful tool. This difference exists both in the use of ICF and the classifications importance for recognition but not ICF: s importance for redistribution. The main conclusion of the study is that awareness about and education around ICF is needed among disability organisations. A restructuring of ICF is also needed, the language should be simplified and the codes should be faded down so that the focus will be on ICF: s intention and the mind map that the classification offers. This is also necessary so that ICF becomes accessible for everybody.
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