What is Disability? Definition of Disability.
Disability refers to the inability of a mental or bodily organ to perform
its function due to some cause (innate, illness, injury, etc.), and to its
condition. A person who is considerably restricted in daily life and social
life for a long time due to the disability is called a disabled person.
Acquired disability does not refer to illness or injury itself, but to physical
and mental limitations on life.
According to the “Basic Law for Persons with Disabilities”
revised in November 1993, “disabled people” are defined as those who are
physically, mentally, or mentally ill and have considerable restrictions on
their daily life or social life for a long time.
Disability is a condition or function judged to
be significantly impaired relative to the usual standard of an individual or
group. This term is used to refer to individual functioning and condition,
including physical impairment, sensory impairment, cognitive impairment,
intellectual impairment mental illness, and various types of chronic disease.
Disabilities can affect people in many ways,
even when one person has the same type of disability as another person. Some
disabilities may be hidden, known as invisible disability.
There are many
types of disabilities, that affect a person's:
- Hearing
- Thinking
- Vision
- Learning
- Movement
- Remembering
- Communicating
- Social relationships and Mental heal

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