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Disability adds to social and economic exclusion, report finds

Posted: 21 June 2004 | Subscribe Online


Disabled children will face continued social and economic exclusion unless their health services are improved, according to interim findings of a major government inquiry into disability, writes Haroon Ashraf.

The report by the Prime Minister’s Strategy Unit attempts to identify practical ways to help disabled people tackle the barriers and hurdles they face throughout life. It found that the UK’s ten million disabled people fare less well than their able-bodied counterparts.

The disabled are less likely to do well at school or college, less likely to have a job, or own their own home. About half of the families with disabled children are very poor, said the report.
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Social and health services for the 320,000 disabled children and their families are under funded and in short supply, it found. The services, currently based on a postcode lottery, vary widely in quality and suffer from a lack of shared information and coordination, said the report.

It found that they suffer adverse social outcomes, particularly at key transition points of their lives, such as moving between full-time education and employment.
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Among its aims the government hopes the study will help set minimum standards of care for disabled people with providers held accountable if services fail.

The government wants interested parties to comment on the interim report and, with their feedback, will produce a final report later this year.


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