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Research on people with disabilities in Zambia: Recent experience and findings. presented by: Mitchell Loeb A “rogue” researcher from: SINTEF Health Research OSLO, Norway. Collaborating Partners. Norway: SINTEF Health Research
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Research on people with disabilities in Zambia: Recent experience and findings presented by: Mitchell Loeb A “rogue” researcher from: SINTEF Health Research OSLO, Norway
Collaborating Partners Norway: • SINTEF Health Research • Norwegian Federation of Organisations of Disabled People (FFO) • Atlas Alliance: on behalf of the Norwegian Agency for Development Co-operation (NORAD)
Collaborating Partners Zambia: • Zambian Federation of the Disabled (ZAFOD) • University of Zambia, Institute on Economic and Social Research (INESOR) • Central Statistical Office (CSO)
Objectives: Overall • to contribute to the improvement in living conditions among people with activity limitations in Zambia
Objectives • to develop a strategy and methodology for the collection of comprehensive, reliable and culturally-adapted statistical data on living conditions among people with disabilities (with particular reference to the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health - ICF) • to initiate a discussion on the concepts and understanding of “disability” • to include and involve people with disabilities in every step of the research process
Design & Methodology: • Choice of instruments: • Living conditions (Namibia), • Disability survey (South Africa), • Activity limitations & Participation restrictions (ICF- World Health Organisation) • Disability screening (Washington Group) • Adaptation to Zambian context through multi-disciplinary workshops including key stakeholders (issues of both design and methodology)
The Disablement Phenomenon - 1980 Disease or Impairment(s) Disability(ies) Handicap(s) disorderBody level Personal level Societal level
Screening for Disabilities Screening based on impairments: the ”What’s wrong with you?” approach: Questions used to identify persons with disabilities:Zambia Census 1990 Is (name of interviewee): Blind? Yes/NoDeaf/dumb? Yes/NoCrippled? Yes/NoMentally retarded? Yes/No
Global disability prevalence rates* * Sources and methodologies are country specific
Screening for Disabilities Questions used to identify persons with disabilities: Zambia Census 2000 “…disability refers to a person who is limited in the kind or amount of activities that he or she can do because of on-going difficulties due to long term physical, mental or health problems.” • includes partially sighted and hearing impaired • prevalence 2.7%
Screening for Activity Limitations: I The “What do you need to become a fully active and integrated member of your society?” approach The use of global screening questions based on difficulties in doing certain daily activities: activity limitations
Screening for Activity Limitations: II Because of a health problem (physical, mental or emotional problem): • Do you have difficulty seeing, even if wearing glasses? • Do you have difficulty hearing, even if using a hearing aid? • Do you have difficulty walking or climbing steps? • Do you have difficulty remembering or concentrating? • Do you have difficulty with self-care such as washing all over or dressing? • Do you have difficulty communicating; for example understanding or being understood by others?
Screening for Activity Limitations: III Questions used to identify persons with disabilities: Living Conditions Survey Zambia 2006 - WG6 Response categories: No, Some, A lot, Unable to do it At least two of six Domains have at least some difficulty • prevalence 13.4%
Number of households and individuals in the study * of 2898 persons screened with disabilities, 65 were found upon detailed interview to be non-disabled; false positives; 2.2% **represents false negatives; 6.2%
Functioning Matrix: Sample prevalence (%) by domain and degree of difficulty (N=28010; 179 missing) D1 = at least some difficulty D2 = at least a lot of difficulty D3 = unable to do it at all
Questionnaires used in the survey Part 1a: Household survey (individuals) • composition of household • education • economic activity • reproductive health Part 1b: Household survey (households) • income, expenses, ownership of land and assets • housing and physical environment • transport and communication Part 2: Detailed disability survey • activities and participation matrix
9 Domains & 44 Activities • Sensory experiences: watching, listening • Basic learning & applying knowledge: reading, writing • Communication: producing and receiving messages • Mobility: walking, moving around • Self-care: washing, dressing • Domestic life: shopping, preparing meals • Interpersonal relations: making friends, interacting with strangers • Major life areas: going to school, getting a job • Community, social and civic life: clubs, religious, politics
Activity Limitation (a measure of capacity) How DIFFICULT it is for you to perform this activity WITHOUT ASSISTANCE? • 0 - no difficulty • 1 - slight difficulty • 2 - moderate difficulty • 3 - severe difficulty • 4 - unable to carry out the activity
Activity Limitations Activity limitation score
Participation Restriction (a measure of performance) Do you have any PROBLEMS performing this activity in your CURRENT ENVIRONMENT? • 0 - no problem • 1 - mild problem • 2 - moderate problem • 3 - severe problem • 4 - complete problem (unable to perform)
Opportunities • Disability is no longer be defined according to one’s physical impairment (the “What’s wrong with you?” approach) • Equality, Accessibility, Inclusion and Human Rights become key elements to the definition of disability (the “What do you need to become a fully active participant in your society?” approach)
Opportunities • Disability is thought of as a process rather than as a state or condition. • Approach to dealing with disability shifts from fixing or repairing a deficit (physical impairment) to the removal of barriers (including attitudinal), thus creating better access and improving social participation. • Domain of disability also shifts away from the medical realm to the socio-environmental.
Opportunities • Inclusion of people with disabilities becomes paramount to the approach. • Thus, people with disabilities are no longer thought of as patients, beneficiaries, or research subjects - but become empowered peers, research participants and decision makers.
Challenges • In Organisations: • Getting the message across: dissemination, education, communication, awareness building • In Research • Change our way of thinking of disability: - from a dichotomy: disabled versus not disabled - to a continuum: degree of activity limitation or degree of participation restriction • In Society: • Normalising or demystifying disability
Reports on Living Conditions among People with Disabilities in Namibia, Zimbabwe, Malawi & Zambia are available for download in pdf-format on the : • SINTEF website:www.sintef.no • SAFOD website:www.safod.org (look for the link to surveys on living conditions) • alternatively, contact me: mitch.loeb@sintef.no