Key documents for the sub-category on "People with disabilities"

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Key documents for the sub-category on "People with disabilities"

This thread is a "sticky thread" which means it will always remain at the top of this sub-category. I have somewhat updated my old post from 2015 but no new documents have come to mind yet.

Recommended top four documents in the thematic area of "People with disabilities", in reverse chronological order:

(1)
Jones, H., Wilbur, J. (2014). Compendium of accessible WASH technologies. WEDC, WaterAid, Share, UK
www.susana.org/en/resources/library/details/2156

The compendium is designed for use by staff working directly with communities - e.g. health workers and community volunteers working with disabled and older people and their families in rural areas of sub-Saharan Africa.

A few examples of technologies are presented that families can adapt to suit their needs and budgets. Many more options are possible. Most of the ideas are suitable for disabled and older people, but are not only for them. As we get older, many of us find it increasingly difficult to squat and balance, or we might be injured or sick. These technologies might also make facilities easier and more comfortable to use by everyone in the family. The ideas are designed to be suitable for household facilities, not for institutional facilities - e.g. schools and clinics - although some ideas might also be useful in these settings.


(2)
Wilbur, J., Jones, H. (2014). Disability - making CLTS fully inclusive, Frontiers of CLTS: Innovations and Insights Issue 3. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), Brighton, UK
www.susana.org/en/resources/library/details/2169

This document focusses on people with disabilities and particular needs for access. There are many forms of disability, including mobility impairments, sensory impairments (affecting sight or hearing), chronic illness, impairments caused by older age or mental health issues. People affected tend not to be present at triggering, to lack voice in the community, to have their needs overlooked, and may even be hidden by their families. This issue outlines the reality of the experiences of people with disabilities, the varied nature of their needs and how they can be met, and concludes with practical recommendations for facilitators and all those engaged in CLTS to make the different phases and processes of CLTS more inclusive.


(3)
WaterAid (2011). What the Global Disability Report means for the WASH sector. WaterAid, UK
www.susana.org/en/resources/library/details/1309

This report gives an overview of the information relevant to the water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) sector in the world’s first report on disability. It also highlights how WaterAid is addressing the recommendations in the report, as well as where we could develop our approaches further.

The report states that disability is less about health conditions and more about social and economic barriers to inclusion. Health conditions that increase the risk of disability include environmental factors such as low birth weight and a lack of essential dietary nutrients. The situation is worsened by exposure to poor sanitation, unsafe water, a lack of access to healthcare and malnutrition. A person’s environment has a major effect on the prevalence and extent of disability. For this reason, the WHO report puts safe water and sanitation at the centre of helping to prevent disability and poverty.


(5)
Jones, H., Reed, B. (2005) Water and sanitation for disabled people and other vulnerable groups: Designing services to improve accessibility, WEDC Loughborough, UK, ISBN: 9781843800798
www.susana.org/en/resources/library/details/2218
Or here on the WEDC website:
wedc-knowledge.lboro.ac.uk/details.html?id=16357
(pdf files are available by chapter or for the complete version; in English and French - see under "Links")

Based on three years of international research and collaboration with water and sanitation and disability sector organisations, this book fills a significant gap in knowledge, and should be of interest to the following audiences: Water and sanitation sector planners, to enable them to consider the needs of disabled people in low-income communities in the development of strategies and general programme design; Water and sanitation service providers, to enable them to implement ordinary programmes and services in ways that include disabled people; Organisations providing disability services, to enable them to address the issue of access to water and sanitation in their work; and Disabled people's organisations, providing information and ideas to use in advocacy for access and rights, and to engage in the consultation process.


You can find further important documents and website links dealing with this topic here: I would be happy to read your feedback about this selection

Regards,
Elisabeth

P.S. For more information about why I created this sticky thread, please see here:
forum.susana.org/forum/categories/10-gen...d-sub-category-level
Dr. Elisabeth von Muench
Freelance consultant on environmental and climate projects
Located in Ulm, Germany
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