Title: Disability Awareness Training
1Disability Awareness Training
- Victoria Eathorne
- RCN Learning Representative
- Disability Advisor
2Aims Objectives
- For you to gain a better understanding of the
obstacles encountered by disabled RCN members - to provide you with a route to information that
can help disabled RCN members stay in employment - in order for us all to adopt a positive approach
to enable disabled RCN members to lead a better
quality of life
3Disability
- What do you understand by the term disability?
- What do you think about?
4Disability
- Physical
- Overt arthritis, cerebral palsy, motor neurone
disease, stroke, spinal cord injury - Hidden epilepsy, diabetes, cardiac conditions,
incontinence, lupus - Sensory - blind or visually impaired, deaf or
hard of hearing, speech - Learning Disability - downs syndrome, autism
- Mental Illness - clinical depression,
schizophrenia
5Impairments (DDA) (1)
- Mobility
- Manual dexterity
- Physical co-ordination
- Continence
- Ability to lift, carry or otherwise move everyday
objects
6Impairments (DDA) (2)
- Speech, hearing or eyesight
- Memory or ability to concentrate, learn or
understand or - Perception of the risk of physical danger
7Definition of Disability
- A disabled person is a person who has, or who
has had in the past, a physical or mental
impairment which has a substantial or long term
adverse effect on his or her ability to carry out
normal day to day activities.
8Emotions
- Imagine that you have become disabled due to an
accident or illness - Discuss with your group about how you might feel
and write down words or phrases that would
describe your feelings
9How does it feel?
- Frustration
- loss of dignity
- dependency
- self pity
- loneliness
- expensive
- Vulnerable
- No confidence
- worthlessness
- angry
- unemployable
- non-sexual
10Attitudes
- positive/ negative
- university
- vicar
- clinical psychologist
- social worker
- children
- myths misconception
11Barriers
- Fear of the unknown
- Lack of information
- Embarrassment
- Body image
- Self esteem
- Social exclusion
12Models of Disability
Social
Charity/tragedy
13Definition The Medical Model
- A disabled person is a person who has, or who
has had in the past, a physical or mental
impairment which has a substantial or long term
adverse effect on his or her ability to carry out
normal day to day activities.
14Definition The Social Model
- A person with an impairment become when disabled
when the organisation of the society in which
they live excludes them from mainstream
activities.
15DefinitionCharity-Tragedy
- Needing hand-outs
- needing support
- tragic
- need pitying
- helpless
- brave
- superhuman
16Word-power
- Cripple
- spastic
- invalid
- retarded
- handicapped
- wheelchair bound
- epileptic- diabetic- asthmatic- paraplegic
17DefinitionThe Social Model
- A person with an impairment become disabled when
the organisation of the society in which they
live excludes them from mainstream activities
Access
18Access Issues
- Information signs
- Car parking paths to
- Entrance
- Reception
- Getting about indoors
- Toilets
- Emergency exits
- Assistance
19The business case
- Recognise disabled people as-
- Employees
- Employers
- Customers
- Shareholders
- Suppliers
- Anybody
20Facts Figures
- 8.3 million disabled adults in UK
- Less than 5 (310,000) use a wheelchair
- 93.2 live in the community
- over 2.6 million are under 65 years of age
- 83 acquire their disability during working
- 7 million carers
- 1 in 4 families affected by disability
21Legislation - DDA
- Change in working patterns and technology in the
last 50 years increased access to the workplace
for disabled people - Disabled people are 3 times more likely to be
unemployed - Increasing influence of disabled people in the
market place
22Discrimination
- environment
- housing
- sport access
- medical
- education
- employment
- insurance
- transport
- social activities
- attitudes
- financial
23Disability Discrimination Act
- education
- employment
- access to goods services
- definition of disability
- Disability Rights Commission
- transport
24Education
25Definition of Discrimination
- an employer or service provider discriminates
against a person if, for a reason which relates
to the disability, he or she treats the person
less favourably than he or she treats or would
treat others who do not have a disability and
cannot show that the treatment was justified
26The DDA allocates twodistinct rights
- The right not to be unjustifiably discriminated
against for a reason which relates to disability - the right to have reasonable adjustments made to
premises or working arrangements
These rights apply to both employment and the
provision of goods and services
27DDA Employment
- Under the act it is unlawful to discriminate
against a disabled person in relation to- - recruitment
- terms conditions
- training promotion
- benefits
- dismissal
28DDA employment reasonable adjustments
- Re-allocation of duties
- transfer, altering hours, place of work
- time off for treatment
- modifying equipment, training
- provide assistant, reader or interpreter
- adjustments to premises
29DDA Employment
- Managers must note the following points-
- there is no service qualification for an
individual to bring a claim under the act - there is no limit on the amount of compensation
which can be awarded to an individual - initially the onus is on the individual to prove
discrimination has taken place - the onus then shifts to the employer to justify
unfavourable treatment
30What constitutes a service
- Any place used by members of the public
- information services
- entertainment recreation leisure facilities
- health, social services
- services provided by any professional, trade, or
by any public authority
31Three basic stipulations for service providers
- Service providers must not
- Refuse to serve a disabled person, or
deliberately exclude them from their service - provide a lower standard of service, or
- offer worse terms to the disabled customer
unless justified
32DDA - Access to goods,facilities services
- Timescale
- from October 1999 service providers have to make
reasonable adjustments - from 2004 service providers have to remove
physical barriers that prevent disabled people
using their service
33Removal of physical barriers reasonable
adjustments
- Removal of the barrier
- alter it so that premises become accessible
- provide an alternative means of access
- make the service available by an alternative means
34Auxiliary Aids
- Communication needs of people with sensory
impairments, such as information on audio tape
for blind people and induction loops to boost
sound for deaf people using a hearing aid
35Auxiliary Aids
- Could include providing a sign language
interpreter for a deaf person and/ or providing
an assistant to help a person with a mobility
impairment to carry shopping in a supermarket
36Access to goods services
- Attitudes
- service delivery
- customer services
- all staff as agents
- access issues
- equal opportunities
- positive treatment
37Working to remove barriers
- Appreciate strengths of disabled people
- recognise importance of disabled people as
customers - understand needs of disabled people as individual
customers and service users - communicate and involve disabled people in
breaking down barriers - avoid stereotypes, assumptions, myths and
misconceptions
38The way forward
- Review current policy
- train staff
- access audit
- disability audit
- examine options of support
- take action- NOW
39Improvements
- Communication
- access to information
- access to services
- attitude
- rights
- social acceptance
40Information
- Housing
- assistance
- finances
- employment
- relationships
- transport
- social
41The end is nigh
- Have we covered everything you wanted to hear
- any last minute questions
- evaluation
42A final thought
- stop, think, ask, treat everybody as an
individual, - treat everyone as you would want to be treated
yourself
43Thank you