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Keyword: disabilities

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  • Wesley J. Smith: Many “Locked In” People Happy

    02/27/2011 10:32:21 AM PST · by wagglebee · 44 replies
    First Things/Secondhand Smoke ^ | 2/27/11 | Wesley J. Smith
    One of the terrible things about euthanasia and food and fluids cases, is the readiness by which many are willing to make despairing totally disabled people dead, that is, people who are fully conscious but completely paralyzed.  Indeed, recently Belgian doctors euthanized such a woman, and then a different set of doctors harvested her organs.  We have also had bioethicists, who once said dehydration should be for people who are unconscious, turn around and say that locked in patients have an even greater claim to withholding food and fluids since they are aware of their helplessness.But this readiness to...
  • Neighborhood designed with veterans in mind

    01/17/2011 11:15:18 AM PST · by ruralvoter · 2 replies
    Herald Tribune (FL) ^ | 1/15/11 | Halle Stockton
    Veterans with disabilities and financial problems are often stuck without proper homes and fight for housing benefits alone. A conglomeration of local organizations and experts hope to turn the page on that trend with a new neighborhood concept designed to aid veterans. Billed the Veterans Village at Cypress Pond Estates in Palmetto -- will be a 78-home subdivision that offers affordable, maintenance-free homes and assistance with financing and accessibility for the disabled.
  • Disability Rights Advocate - Robert Greig - Responds to the euthanasia propaganda

    10/19/2010 4:03:01 PM PDT · by wagglebee · 4 replies
    Euthanasia Prevention Coalition ^ | 10/19/10 | Robert Greig
    I'm a Disability-Rights activist and writer who lives in a hospital's long-term care unit. I was born with Arthrogryposis, and I'm at the stage where I live with a chronic pulmonary condition. In July, I will have been in long-term care for ten years, and in this ten year period, alot of people around me have died. With all the people I have gotten to know through the years, and who have died, I think most of them died with dignity.--This includes my sweet wife, who died in 2006 from Cystic Fibrosis. The will of an individual is nobody's...
  • More intellectually disabled youths go to college

    10/17/2010 2:34:47 PM PDT · by bruinbirdman · 43 replies
    Seattle Times ^ | 10/17/2010 | HEATHER HOLLINGSWORTH
    Zach Neff is all high-fives as he walks through his college campus in western Missouri. The 27-year-old with Down syndrome hugs most everybody, repeatedly. He tells teachers he loves them. "I told Zach we are putting him on a hug diet - one to say hello and one to say goodbye," said Joyce Downing, who helped start a new program at the University of Central Missouri that serves students with disabilities. The hope is that polishing up on social skills, like cutting back on the hugs, living in residence halls and going to classes with non-disabled classmates will help students...
  • British Pundit Virginia Ironside: "Smother Disabled Child With Pillow," Use Abortion

    10/05/2010 4:09:26 PM PDT · by wagglebee · 34 replies · 1+ views
    Life News ^ | 10/5/10 | Steven Ertelt
    London, England (LifeNews.com) -- British television pundit Virginia Ironside is drawing gasps from pro-life advocates from across the globe for advocating killing disabled children. She said any "good mother" would smother a disabled child with a pillow because of the frustration bringing up such a baby would pose. "If I were the mother of a suffering child -- I mean a deeply suffering child -- I would be the first to want to put a pillow over its face," Ironside said in a video clip of a new BBC television interview she gave."If it was a child I really loved,...
  • Disabled Swedish man discovered bound

    09/02/2010 4:58:14 PM PDT · by markomalley · 11 replies
    UPI ^ | 9/2/2010
    MALMO, Sweden, Sept. 2 (UPI) -- A Swedish man who is blind and has Down syndrome and some autistic traits was bound by the arms for much of the last 25 years, officials said. The man, who also is unable to speak and was considered to be at risk for self-destruction, resides in an assisted living facility in Malmo, Swedish news agency TT/The Local reported Thursday. "I have never heard of anything like it. Our investigators and inspectors are very experienced, but all have been deeply shocked. This treatment is illegal," said Christer Neleryd of the National Board of Health...
  • Pennsylvania Court: Guardians Can't Pull the Plug on Mentally Disabled People

    08/30/2010 4:19:51 PM PDT · by wagglebee · 315 replies
    Life News ^ | 8/30/10 | Steven Ertelt
    Harrisburg, PA (LifeNews.com) -- In a ruling involving a mentally disabled man whose legal guardians sought the power to end his medical care, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has determined that state law requires life-preserving treatment for people who are not near death and have not refused treatment. The Alliance Defense Fund and allied pro-life attorneys filed a friend-of-the-court brief on behalf of 53-year-old David Hockenberry, who has had acute mental disabilities since birth, arguing that his legal guardians should not be allowed to deny him life-preserving treatment while he is not terminal or unconscious.Hockenberry’s guardians unsuccessfully attempted to deny him...
  • Obama Administration Cracks Down on Kindles

    08/28/2010 10:13:39 PM PDT · by John Semmens · 46 replies
    A Semi-News/Semi-Satire from AzConservative ^ | 27 August 2010 | John Semmens
    University efforts to test Amazon’s electronic readers—Kindles—as substitutes for standard textbooks has run into trouble with the Obama Administration. The idea behind using Kindles is to save money by supplanting bulky paper-based books with lighter and smaller electronic devices. For example, one small hand-held Kindle could hold all the books needed for a four-year degree. Despite the seemingly obvious benefits, the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division is threatening legal action against any school that might be tempted to try the devices. Thomas Perez, head of the Civil Rights Division, warns that the devices violate the Americans with Disabilities Act. “Even...
  • Couple adopt woman after reading her story in paper (MAJOR tear-jerker)

    08/09/2010 4:43:11 PM PDT · by St. Louis Conservative · 11 replies · 1+ views
    The Times Daily ^ | April 30, 2010 | Michelle Rupe Eubanks
    If Haylee Cain were telling you her life's story, it would begin Thursday. The 21-year-old said she would always remember it as the day she moved out of the nursing home and into the lives of Donna and Judson Emens, of Tuscumbia. "I'm just so excited," she said. "I said I wouldn't cry, but I might." Because she suffers from cerebral palsy and because her grandfather, James Thomas, was no longer able to care for her, Haylee was forced to live in a nursing home. No state agency exists to care for individuals such as Haylee who suffer from physical,...
  • Former ‘locked-in’ patient speaks of her will to live

    08/08/2010 11:24:31 AM PDT · by wagglebee · 11 replies
    The Christian Institute ^ | 8/5/10 | The Christian Institute
    A mother of two has revealed how she never lost her will to live after an illness left her paralysed and unable to speak for 18 months. Kerry Pink was left suffering from a condition known as ‘locked-in syndrome’ by an undiagnosed neurological illness when she was just 35. Mrs Pink, writing in the Daily Mail, said: “My memories are blurred. But some things remain absolutely certain. I know that however dark the twilight world I inhabited, I never lost my will to live. Determined “I was always determined to come back home. And it was my absolute faith...
  • Paralysed man blinked to stay alive as life support machine was about to be turned off

    07/14/2010 9:05:26 PM PDT · by Nachum · 20 replies
    the daily mail ^ | 7/14/10 | David Derbyshire and Andrew Levy
    It is a decision no parent ever wants to make. But as the Rudd family watched their 43-year-old son lying paralysed and comatose on a life support machine, they came to a terrible conclusion. Recalling a conversation where Richard told them he wouldn't want to be trapped in a useless body, his relatives agreed it was time to let him go. Yet even as the Rudd family mentally prepared to say goodbye, his doctor made a startling discovery. Despite his devastating spinal injuries, Richard Rudd was still able to blink his eyes in response to simple questions.
  • Doctors' 'Right-To-Die' Efforts For Terminally Ill Patients Worry Advocates For Disabled

    05/16/2010 11:25:09 AM PDT · by wagglebee · 22 replies · 618+ views
    Hartford Courant ^ | 5/16/10 | Arielle Levin Becker
    Cathy Ludlum of Manchester has a neuromuscular condition called spinal muscular atrophy and has been in a wheelchair since she was a child. She and other advocates for people with disablities are fighting against an effort to allow doctors to help terminally ill patients end their lives. (JOHN WOIKE / HARTFORD COURANT / May 13, 2010) Cathy Ludlum says she has a great life, but since childhood she's been aware not everyone thinks so. She remembers being 5, sitting in her wheelchair as people in the supermarket looked at her and shook their heads. She wondered how she could...
  • A mom's love: Woman has devoted life to caring for brain-injured daughter

    05/10/2010 4:13:50 PM PDT · by wagglebee · 17 replies · 714+ views
    The Citizen of Laconia ^ | 5/9/10 | Adam D. Krauss
    John Huff/Staff photographer Rochester residents Ellen Edgerly, left, and her daughter Sara. ROCHESTER — A few years back, hundreds of bikers gathered in Representatives Hall in Concord to protest a proposed helmet law. Ellen Edgerly, 51, an advocate with the state's Brain Injury Association, was sitting in the middle of the room, a lone voice in a sea of leather and wild beards, when a lawmaker asked if anyone supported the change. "She stood up, passed all of these tough guys, and testified about brain injury and what it means," says Steven Wade, the association's executive director. "It took...
  • More Precious than Gold: Canadian Olympic Champ Calls Disabled Brother 'My Inspiration'

    02/19/2010 4:02:11 PM PST · by wagglebee · 8 replies · 373+ views
    LifeSiteNews ^ | 2/19/10 | Kathleen Gilbert
    TORONTO, February 18, 2010 (LifeSiteNews.com) - The winning performance of moguls skier Alexandre Bilodeau on Sunday sent a ripple of excitement through Canada as the world watched the young Canadian become the first ever to win Olympic gold on home turf.  But for the newly-dubbed "Alexandre the Great," the real celebration was at the bottom of the course - where he embraced brother Frederic, who suffers from cerebral palsy and whom Bilodeau affectionately calls "my inspiration."The elder of the two, Frederic stood up from his wheelchair and cheered, grinning widely in front of cameras, as his brother crossed the...
  • Ken Connor: Taking Care of People, Not Problems

    02/13/2010 1:03:29 PM PST · by wagglebee · 13 replies · 483+ views
    Christian Post ^ | 2/13/10 | Ken Connor
    Three years ago, the medical community was stunned when Rom Houben―diagnosed to have been in a persistent vegetative state since a horrific car crash in 1983―was discovered to be fully conscious and aware. Unable to speak or communicate, he’d lived as a prisoner in his own body for over two decades. Doctors had performed test after test, concluding repeatedly that Houben’s consciousness was “extinct.” It took 23 years for technology to prove that the opposite was true: Houben’s brain was not dead, and his consciousness was not extinct. “I shall never forget the day when they discovered what was...
  • Better Dead than Disabled?

    01/16/2010 12:36:58 PM PST · by wagglebee · 21 replies · 682+ views
    Energy Publisher ^ | 1/13/10 | Michael Cook
    When assisted suicide is legalised most of the people who will die are disabled. And American disability advocates take a very dim view of it. This is the theme of a hard-hitting series of articles in the latest issue of the Disability and Health Journal. The editor, Suzanne McDermott, of the University of South Carolina School of Medicine, writes that she changed her own mind after studying the issue. At first she believed that assisted suicide was solely a personal autonomy issue. But eventually she was persuaded that it is at the heart of the movement for disability rights: "Almost...
  • Assisted suicide: disabled should not be allowed legally to kill themselves

    12/19/2009 10:59:35 AM PST · by wagglebee · 33 replies · 758+ views
    UK Telegraph ^ | 12/17/09 | Christopher Hope
    In a submission to a consultation on relaxing the rules on assisted suicide - which ends today - a coaliton of five disabled groups, said that “to see suicide as the right solution is to abandon hope. Severely ill and terminally ill people do no deserve society to give up on them.” The group, which is lead by Baroness Campbell, accused others who were pushing for the change as “seeking to change the law by the back door by creating the impression that those who assist in a suicide will be immune from prosecution”. Over the past 10 years 100...
  • Wesley J. Smith: It’s Scary Time For People With Disabilities in the UK

    11/10/2009 4:15:29 PM PST · by wagglebee · 4 replies · 541+ views
    First Things/Secondhand Smoke ^ | 11/10/09 | Wesley J. Smith
      I awoke this morning in Edinburgh, jet lagged but looking forward to a productive time of debating and discussing assisted suicide.  Stumbling down to breakfast, I was sharply awakened into my usual state of concern for society by a front page headline in the Independent: Do I love my daughter? With all my heart. Will it be a relief when she dies?  Without question: Life and Death Issues with a Disabled Child The article is written by a woman named Tussie Myerson, the mother of eighteen-year-old Emmy, a young woman with severe seizure disorder and profound cognitive disabilities.  Myerson complains bitterly–and righteously–about the lack of services...
  • Wesley J. Smith: UK Court to Rule Whether Baby Better Off Dead Than Disabled

    11/08/2009 12:32:07 PM PST · by wagglebee · 14 replies · 570+ views
    First Things/Secondhand Smoke ^ | 11/5/09 | Wesley J. Smith
    Most contested cases of removing babies or profoundly disabled adults from needed life support have involved those with serious brain injuries or cognitive impairments. But once the idea that dead is better than disabled takes hold, it will soon spread to those with physical disabilities.Now, in the UK, parents are fighting over withdrawing life support from a seriously disabled one-year-old child who is cognitively normal. From the story: The mother of a chronically ill baby has defended her court battle with the child’s father to have his life support machine turned off. The boy, known only as RB, has...
  • The Task of the Catholic Medical Professional

    10/19/2009 10:31:02 AM PDT · by NYer · 2 replies · 252+ views
    Inside Catholic ^ | October 19, 2009 | Most Reverend Charles J. Chaput, O.F.M. Cap.
    A number of my friends have children with disabilities. Their problems range from cerebral palsy to Turner's syndrome to Trisomy 18, which is extremely serious. But I want to focus on one fairly common genetic disability to make my point. I'm referring to Trisomy 21, or Down syndrome.   You may already know that Down is not a disease. It's a genetic disorder with a variety of symptoms. Therapy can ease the burden of those symptoms, but Down syndrome is permanent. There's no cure. People with Down syndrome have mild to moderate developmental delays. They have low to middling...