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Stop press!: how the press portrays disabled people
- Authors:
- COOKE Caroline, DAONE Liz, MORRIS Gwilym
- Publisher:
- SCOPE
- Publication year:
- 2000
- Pagination:
- 40p.
- Place of publication:
- London
Television and the newspapers also have a strong influence on the way we think, so it is important to be aware of the language used in press reports. This often carries subtle messages about the subject that we may not even realise are there. Scope, the charity that works with people who have cerebral palsy, carried out an eight-week study of local and national papers in 1991. It found that there was a clear pattern to disability stories. For example, there were no disabled sports stories in the sports pages of any national newspaper, except for one story about a disabled horse-rider. However, disabled sports people who 'managed to take part in sport 'despite their disability did appear in other sections of the paper. There was very little coverage of the way society treats people with disabilities. And there were very few stories written by or for people with disabilities, despite the fact that there are over 8 million disabled adults in the UK.
Acting against discrimination
- Author:
- KINRADE Steve
- Journal article citation:
- Professional Nurse, 18(12), August 2003, pp.714-715.
- Publisher:
- Emap Healthcare
Reports on a survey which interviewed people with a variety of disabilities on their experiences in hospital. Results revealed that their needs were often not met and that they felt staff had negative views of disabled people.
Disability, counselling and psychotherapy: challenges and opportunities
- Author:
- WILSON Shula
- Publisher:
- Palgrave Macmillan
- Publication year:
- 2003
- Pagination:
- 144p.,bibliog.
- Place of publication:
- Basingstoke
Whilst much progress has been made in the range of practical solutions available for the physical limitations of the disabled person and great strides have been taken towards equality of opportunity, scant attention has been paid to the felt experience of the disabled person and the ways in which psychotherapy may be constructively employed. This book directly addresses this gap and, taking a life-span perspective and a psychoanalytic approach, actively explores the challenges and opportunities of disability to psychotherapy, the caring professions and, more widely, to society.