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People with Disabilities |
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People with Disabilities, persons with physical, sensory, or mental impairments that can make performing an everyday task more difficult. Under this broad definition, it was estimated in the early 1990s that 19.4 percent of the United States population was disabled. Some disabilities, such as a broken hip, may be temporary; others are relatively minor, such as vision impairments that can be modified by corrective lenses. Other disabilities classified as severe may not represent a handicap, that is, the inability to take part in community life on an equal level with others. For instance, a person confined to a wheelchair may be able to live independently if physical and social barriers to mobility have been removed. In 1992 an estimated 24 million Americans had a severe disability. In the same year more than 1.7 million veterans of U.S. military conflicts received monthly compensation for some service-connected disability, and 3.2 million disabled workers under age 65 received regular benefits from the Social Security Administration.
LEGAL RIGHTS|
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Efforts by disabled people to establish legal rights mark a sharp contrast with traditional U.S. public policy. Before the 1970s, most legislation dealing with the problems of people with disabilities, such as Social Security or public-assistance entitlements, provided limited financial support or specific services. The change in the 1970s and 1980s centered on the rights of disabled people to the same protection under the law enjoyed by the rest of the population.
A major step in achieving these goals was the landmark federal Americans with Disabilities Act (1990), which prohibits discrimination against people with physical or mental disabilities in employment, public accommodations, transportation, and telecommunications. Successful implementation of this law will have a profound and positive impact on the status of people with disabilities.
UNIT 20
DISABILITY
江苏省靖江高级中学
顾亚琴 张纯 制作