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Lack of NHS targets for disabled people leads to unequal treatment

Posted: 27 March 2003 | Subscribe Online


Disabled people are being discriminated against in the NHS as a result of a lack of targets ensuring services meet their needs.

At a conference on improving access to health and social care for disabled people last week, Karen Shook, adviser for disability equality and user involvement at Brent Primary Care Trust, pointed out the discrepancy in monitoring at the NHS.

She said:"Under the Race Relations Amendment Act 2000, there are targets in the NHS for the percentage of services which are ethnically monitored. There is nothing like this for disabled people."
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There are also no specific targets on the employment of disabled people within the NHS, despite various pieces of guidance, many of which date back to 2000.

The Disability Services Team, which is responsible for providing information about the implementation of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 on the Department of Health website, has not updated its pages since November 2001.

A spokesperson for the DoH said an assessment of provision for disabled people was "planned" and discussions were under way with the Disability Rights Commission on forming a strategy on disability employment equality in the NHS.

New research by disabled people's charity Leonard Cheshire reveals that while more than 90 per cent of primary care trusts include disabled access in their policies, significant numbers of disabled people still experience unequal treatment. Staff attitudes and poor communication with service users are identified as key problems.
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Meanwhile, the head of the British Council for Disabled People, Andy Rickell, told the conference that national service frameworks weakened disabled people's ability to fight discrimination by categorising them by impairment. "NSFs split people up according to their different problems when in reality everyone has a common problem relating to discrimination," he said.

Rickell added that service providers were often unsure about which NSF people fitted into.

The conference was held by Harrogate Centre for Excellence in Health & Social Care.

Fair Treatment? from Leonard Cheshire on 020 7802 8204.


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