test 1 Flashcards

1
Q

what are the 4 classification terms to describe disabilities

A

personal, public, critical and definitional

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2
Q

what is personal meaning of disabilities

A

the most important perspective, their lived experience. not abnormal or unfortunate, just an aspect of a persons life

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3
Q

public meaning of disabilities

A

literal meaning, thinking that disability means person lacks the ability

how they function against society and the norms, social determinants of health

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4
Q

critical meaning

A

over arching legal and social view

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5
Q

people first language

A
  • People first language should always be used
  • When referring to an individual use their name first and the supports they require later
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6
Q

what are the most important factors contributing to the decline of institutions

A
  • Stereotypes
  • Overcrowding
  • Use of drugs
  • Reduced public interest/funding
  • Improving community conditions
  • Growing interest in equality and human rights
  • Dramatic failure of eugenics
  • Lack of progress
  • Lack of knowledge
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7
Q

the institution perspective of disability

A

a perspective that people must have the reasoning and ability to enter legal contracts under the law

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8
Q

biomedical view of disability

A

rise of intellectual testing to determine “normal vs. abnormal intelligence?” its the pathological view of the person

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9
Q

social model of disability

A

critical of the disability theory, arises from the feminist movement
* Emphasis on redressing harm and focuses on challenging society to consider equality of rights and freedoms
* Considers impairment in society rather than with the person

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10
Q

Progressive realization

A
  • Expectation for the country to “act in good faith” and move towards ratification over years or decades
  • Responsibilities of counteris to uphold human rights of its people
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11
Q

what are the 4 key rights

A
  1. inclusion at all levels
    * Reasonable accommodations
    * Free from discrimination
    (separate classes, systemic issues)
  2. Inclusion in community right - right to safe housing, adequate assistance, and enabling
    environments ( no ability to choose where they live)
  3. Equality before the law - supported decision making vs. substitute decision making. Access to supports to exercise human rights (denied full legal capacity, can’t own property)
  4. Rights of women and children - vulnerable population is subject to greater forms of abuse and discrimination including poverty, forced sterilization, and sexual violence
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12
Q

benefits of acknowledging and diagnosing

A
  • Allows them to get resources
  • Legal and civil protection ( theft, they didn’t know)
  • Assist w clarifying and understanding behaviouhr
  • Research and targeting interventons or treatments- improving quality of life
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13
Q

Supported decision making

A
  • Advice and support with the decision making
  • Helping the person to understand and communicate
  • Could be more about advice, supporting them
  • Usually someone who has a personal connection
  • Can be more than one person
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14
Q

Substitute decision making

A
  • Last resort
  • 2 types ( personal care and property management)
  • Personal care = where they will live, what theyre doing for recreation, education
  • Property = having ability to receive or sell property, financial pieces
  • Can only be when a decision needs to be made not just in case.
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15
Q

A social movement

A
  • The parent movement = advocates for the economic and social rights of family members with disabilities
  • The independent living movement
  • Normalization movement = the inherent right to participate in normal activities
  • Deinstitutionalization movement
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16
Q

Social ecological model

A
  • Enables people with ID to:
  • Speak for themselves
  • Identify the communicate environment that they enjoy
  • Participate in identifying goals and needed supports
17
Q

Strategies to promote advocacy and self advocacy

A

4 components fundamental to self advocacy
1. Knowledge of self
2. Knowledge of rights
3. Communication of ones knowledge of self rights
4. Leadership

18
Q

Evidence based practice

A

Defined as the integration of 3 elements into intervention decisions by:
1. Empirically supported tx = scientific evidence that has been tested and confirmed
2. Integrative approaches = this is what would adapt the empirically supported treatments into a context
3. Common elements of effective evidence based interventions
4. Common factors and characteristics of effective programs

19
Q

what’s the expectation

A

people with DID are Cared for by society
- Subject to discrimination, segregation, persecution attempted eradication
- Used for entertainment and amusement- poor treatment ( the greatest showman)

20
Q

what are some impacts of institutionalization

A
  • Supported by politics, sciece, other social leaders that institutions were integral part of society and a sanctuary for those living in it and beneficial to everyone
21
Q

The duality of treatment of DID

A
  • Cared for by society
  • Subject to discrimination, segregation, persecution attempted eradication
  • Used for entertainment and amusement- poor treatment ( the greatest showman)
22
Q

industrial revolution

A

gave rise to new ideas like aslylum in the 1800s which were viewed as way to rehabilitate people.

There was a focus on education and training so children can return to mainstream classrooms

23
Q

concept of community living

A

based on inclusion and equality and changing the environment to support people with DID. They normalized and shift towards deinstitutionalization

24
Q

normalization

A

belief of abandoning the stereotypes and ideologies and substitute it for inclusion. instead it emphasizes inclusion, individual ability, personal fulfilment etc

25
Q

what are some social criticisms of deinstitutionalization

A

concerns of protection on both sides

staffing problems

resistance from professional groups and labour unions ( loss of employment for those in institutional settings)

26
Q

what is the sociological view of DI

A

disability is an interaction between people and their environment and supports should bridge that gap
- ex: putting wheelchairs in rinks but have no programming

27
Q

what are some advantages of increasing knowledge about disabilities

A

scientific- medical advantages
genetic testing, DNA analysis ( screening and pregnancies)
person-entered approaches like people first movement and advocacy
increased collaboration and consultation

28
Q

what are the disadvantages of increasing DI knowledge

A

agreed upon definitions for support services which puts people in categories and not everyone can fit in that category so some people may not fit the criteria

tracking useful information for funding purposes, most countries have not found a way for tracking it

people are living longer - who assumes the responsibility of the aging population?

genetic knowledge, ethical dilemma

service entitlements- long waitlists, accessibility for rural and remote issues