This year, UNICEF’s State of the World’s Children Report has called on nations to set targets to include children with disabilities in the mainstream.
India, which has
signed and ratified the United Nations Convention on the Rights of
Persons with Disabilities and Optional Protocol,now needs to promote
home-based care, provideservicesfor children with disabilities and end
institutionalisation, stated the report.
The report was released by Social Welfare Minister B.Valarmathi here on Friday.
It
said that a definition of disability should go beyond mere medical
classification and incorporate social determinants. It sets a framework
to ensure that health and disability are seen within the broader context
of social barriers. Since functioning and disability occur in certain
contexts, it should be meaningful to assess not only bodily but also the
societal and environmental factors at play, it said.
The report is based on the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health of the WHO.
“We
need to place the problem at the forefront and create a supportive
environment for children with disabilities; an atmosphere free from
exclusion, one that would encourage them to grow and reach their natural
potential,” said Satish Kumar, UNICEF chief of field office, Tamil Nadu
and Kerala. “Let us take the first step now,” he urged.
The report sought to ensure that children have a say in schemes that affect them.
Counting
every single child with disability is very important, Dr. Satish Kumar
stressed. One widely used global estimate puts the number of children
with some disability at 93 million. However, there are varying estimates
for the numbers in India. According to Census 2001, 2.13 per cent of
India’s population is disabled, but the world report on disability 2011
states that about 25 per cent of the population in India is disabled.
Source : The Hindu , 30th June 2013
Source : The Hindu , 30th June 2013
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