Tuesday, September 1, 2015

How To Properly Communicate About Individuals With Intellectual Disabilities

By Daphne Bowen


Words, whether they're written or spoken, can affect an individual tremendously. Like any person, individuals with intellectual disabilities can be affected negatively or be hurt just by the way one talks about them. Many at times, topics or subjects about these vulnerable people are handled carelessly.

To clarify, intellectual disability is different from mental illness. Intellectual disability is to have poor scholarly capacity joined with impedance in adjusting to the ordinary social environment. Reasons may incorporate brain damage or hindered advancement as a youngster. Mental illness happens regularly amid pre-adulthood, generally during critical moments of a person's life. Persons with Mental illness even have excellent scholastic record and may lead a seemingly ordinary life.

Education is key to be able to talk about intellectually challenged individuals. If you genuinely want to protect and uplift the morale of this challenged group, there are many ways. This article is not just for journalists but for anyone who has access to social media or who can have a conversation with others. Read: Everyone. Here are some pointers, collated by various organizations, on how to properly talk about persons with intellectual disability.

When talking or writing about them, avoid using the words: "retarded, mentally ill, abnormal, insane" or any other term that is synonymous to these. Once a person is labeled retarded, he is misconstrued to be a nuisance and a burden. This isn't the case as many people with intellectual disabilities, look after themselves and strive hard to be good in school.

Grown-ups and youngsters with scholarly incapacities are not the same. They are still in different wavelength and must be dealt with accordingly. At the point when a columnist is composing an article around a mentally challenged grown-up, he must utilize the full name of the individual, for example, John Doe rather than simply John.

It is not good to see or portray the life of these persons in an overly dramatic fashion, full of suffering, especially from the family's perspective, and melancholic. This must be avoided at all cost as a lot of those families do not live in such a manner. All the necessary support is received from such families in order to ensure the child has that positive relationship their caretakers and families.

Just a fraction of people in a particular community know a family that has a person who is intellectually challenged. It is also the responsibility of social media users and writers to enlighten the society and portray these persons in every aspect of life, i. E at work, being part of a crowd or at home. It does not help their image much keeping them in the hospitals or associating them with those treatment facilities for long term.

Avoid the terms "victim of", "suffering from", or "unfortunate" when creating write ups about them or talking about them in public. Firstly, because intellectual disability is not a kind of sickness. Secondly, the negative connotation is only how people see them not how those victims see themselves.

All these warning signs may be very limiting but everyone is encouraged to talk and write about them more. Now, they tend to reflect how society chooses them to be - neglected and in order to lift them up and to encourage them more, it is better to talk and write about them in a positive matter.




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