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Transitions to Adulthood for Youth with Disabilities Robert Wm. Blum, MD, MPH, PhD William H. Gates, Sr. Professor and Chair Department of Population.

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Presentation on theme: "Transitions to Adulthood for Youth with Disabilities Robert Wm. Blum, MD, MPH, PhD William H. Gates, Sr. Professor and Chair Department of Population."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Transitions to Adulthood for Youth with Disabilities Robert Wm. Blum, MD, MPH, PhD William H. Gates, Sr. Professor and Chair Department of Population & Family Health Sciences Prepared for: Adolescence and the Transition to Adulthood Conference University of Chicago, Illinois 8-9 November, 2004

3 Today more than 90% of all children born with a chronic or disabling condition will live to be an adult.

4 Terms Impairment: a statement of the physical condition Disability: the functional limitations that are the consequence of an impairment; unable to performance- appropriate tasks Handicap: the social limitations that result from a disability

5 Terms continued: Chronic: present for more than 3 months Special Health Care Needs: those who have or are at increased risk for a chronic physical, developmental, behavioral, or emotional condition and who also require supplemental health care and related services.

6 Prevalence 18% of youth have a chronic condition; 5% have a condition that has a functional impact

7 Prevalence for Leading Chronic Conditions of Adolescence ConditionsPer 1,000 Asthma42.5 Congenital Heart Disease 15.2 Epilepsy2.4 Cerebral Palsy1.8 Diabetes1.0 Cancer0.4 Spina Bifida0.2

8 More than 1.2 million young people in the United States use an assistive technology.

9 Disability Patterns Prevalence rates have increased more than 250% since 1975; Prevalence rates increased with age; Ethnic minorities have highest prevalence; Those who are poor and/or from single-parent households have higher prevalence.

10 The Educational Impact Severity of Impairment Graduation Rate (%) None82.6 Mild79.5 Moderate76.1 Severe61.4

11 Postsecondary School Enrollment of Youth with Disabilities out of School 3 to 5 Years Primary Disability Category Percentage of Youth Who, Since High School, Had Enrolled In: Any Postsecondary School Postsecondary Vocational School 2-Year College 4-Year College All conditions26.715.911.34.2 Learning disability30.519.013.74.4 Emotional disturbance25.615.410.14.2 Speech impairment48.816.425.413.3 Mental retardation12.89.63.6.0 Visual impairment57.015.627.533.4 Hard of hearing60.416.040.415.7 Deafness60.022.533.222.1 Orthopedic impairment46.312.632.312.9 Other health impairment56.033.928.421.9 Multiple disabilities8.6.77.92.2

12 The Employment Impact of Having a Disability England: males with disabilities were less likely to be employed and had less education than peers. The same was not true for females. Finland: Young adults with disabilities were twice as likely not to receive vocational training. At age 36, 14% of men without disabilities were unemployed compared to 59% of men with (a 400% difference). No difference for women. United States: 54% of adults with renal disease are employed compared with 75% without.

13 The Social Impact of Having a Disability Young adults with disabilities are more than twice as likely to still be living with parents (68% vs. 29%); More likely to be single (76% vs. 65%)

14 Brain involvement; Degree and type of impairment; Degree of visibility; Prognosis; Course of illness Condition-specific factors that impact transitions to adulthood

15 Individual factors that impact transitions to adulthood Perceived responses from others; Gender; Costs; Disclosure

16 Peer factors that impact transitions to adulthood Social isolation; Sexual relationships

17 Creating a Different World for People with Disabilities Creating a Different World for People with Disabilities


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