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Disability policy must espouse medical as well as social rehabilitation
[journal article]
Abstract A confident statement in Social Inclusion by Mannon and MacLacLan that disability is not a health problem places doubt on the rationale of their otherwise well-written research agenda for disability studies. Both by definition and in practice disability is in part about the impact of health on a per... view more
A confident statement in Social Inclusion by Mannon and MacLacLan that disability is not a health problem places doubt on the rationale of their otherwise well-written research agenda for disability studies. Both by definition and in practice disability is in part about the impact of health on a person's functioning. The consequence of this misperception among social policy makers is a decreased emphasis on the resources and research needed to build medical rehabilitation programs. This is especially true in lower resource countries where naive inclusion of medical rehabillitation within community based rehabilitation strategies has resulted in fewer resources and less expertise to deliver the distinctly different, and well validated services of a medical rehabilitation team. Any rational research agenda on disability must focus on disease and medical rehabilitation as well as the psychological, social, and environmental factors discussed in this article.... view less
Keywords
health; disability; rehabilitation; medical rehabilitation; illness; social environment; sociopsychological factors; social factors; inclusion
Classification
Health Policy
Medicine, Social Medicine
Document language
English
Publication Year
2013
Page/Pages
p. 136-138
Journal
Social Inclusion, 1 (2013) 2
ISSN
2183-2803
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed
Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution