Search results for ‘Subject term:"physical disabilities"’ Sort:
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Sexuality and disability: a case of occupational injustice
- Authors:
- SAKELLARIOU Dikaios, ALGADO Simo Salvador
- Journal article citation:
- British Journal of Occupational Therapy, 69(2), February 2006, pp.69-76.
- Publisher:
- Sage
Sexuality is an integral part of human life; however, people with disabilities often report an unsatisfying sexual life. The aim of this study was both to explore the reasons for the reported unsatisfying life and to reframe it in terms of occupational injustice and denial of participation in meaningful occupation. In-depth interviews were carried out with six men with a spinal cord injury. Thematic analysis was applied to the data and formed the basis for the textural description of the participants' experiences. The study participants generally found that certain societal beliefs and attitudes had an impact on their participation in sexuality-related occupations. They were experiencing occupational injustice as a result of the restriction of engagement in meaningful occupation. Impairment per se was usually not perceived as a barrier to a fulfilling sexual life. The study concluded that occupational therapists should embrace occupational justice as the main purpose of the profession and include issues of sexuality in their agenda.
Children's perceptions of their disabled siblings: she's different but it's normal for us
- Authors:
- STALKER Kirsten, CONNORS Clare
- Journal article citation:
- Children and Society, 18(3), June 2004, pp.218-230.
- Publisher:
- Wiley
This paper reports on a two-year study exploring children's understandings of disability. It focuses on findings from interviews conducted with 24 children, aged 6 to 19, who had disabled siblings, exploring their perceptions of impairment, disability and difference. Most were very aware of their sibling's impairment but the majority did not see that as making their siblings different. Where difference was perceived, this was sometimes attributed to their siblings' experience of disability - unequal treatment and the hostile attitudes of others. Most children saw their disabled sibling as holding various identities and their shared biographies, as members of the same family, may have taken precedence over any perceived differences.
'Did you see that guy in the wheelchair down the pub?' Interactions across difference in a public place
- Authors:
- LENNEY Michael, SERCOMBE Howard
- Journal article citation:
- Disability and Society, 17(1), January 2002, pp.5-18.
- Publisher:
- Taylor and Francis
Most research undertaken on interactions between able-bodied people and people with physical disabilities has focused on the way that people with disabilities are de-humanised during the interaction process. Little attention has been given to the possibility that able bodied people are unsure of how to go about interacting with people with disabilities. Reports a qualitative study of interaction in public places with Elton, a young person coping with cerebral palsy. Elton and the other participants used visual symbols to assess approachability, status, ability, attractiveness, and quality of character. The difficulty in each encounter is that it is shaped by people's interpretation of the other, arrived at by their own projections of meaning attached to the 'form' of the body.
Sex on wheels
- Author:
- RAYNER Tom
- Journal article citation:
- Nursing Times, 8.9.99, 1999, pp.32-33.
- Publisher:
- Nursing Times
The myth that people with severe disabilities are unable to have sex and, in any case, are not interested in it, persists. This article explores the contrary opinions and experiences of people with disabilities.
New kinds of care new kinds of relationships: how purchasing services affects relationships in giving and receiving personal assistance
- Authors:
- GLENDINNING Caroline, et al
- Journal article citation:
- Health and Social Care in the Community, 8(3), May 2000, pp.201-211.
- Publisher:
- Wiley
Draws on interviews with users of direct payments and focus group discussions with the personal assistants (PAs) who assist them with personal and daily living activities. It discusses the benefits and the drawbacks of directly employing such assistance, from the perspectives of both the purchasers and the providers of these services. The article shows that direct payments can enable disabled people to purchase a much wider range of flexible help, better continuity, greater control and an enhanced quality of life, compared with conventional services.