Not every human is normal! A person who is unable to perform one or more activities, required in everyday life is stated as disable. (…)
I was going through a leading magazine's reader woes section. There were many issues concerning reader’s problems. A mother was worried about her two year, who could not speak. (…)
Every human being looks forward for a healthy life- good job, handsome salary for family, best of education facilities for his children, and self-satisfaction of doing a job well. (…)
Fear is a natural human response and has, thus, been experience by each one of us at some point of time in our lives. (…)
Are you getting increasingly forgetful? Do you forget where you kept keys of your car last night? Worse, if you fail to recall as to where you keep your car keys usually? (…)
There is a phase in everybody’s life when one does not feel nice about many things or anything, and for no particular reason. (…)
Though it may sound strange, Alzheimer’s disease afflicts somewhere between 5 % to 15 % of people over the age of 65. (…)
About three in one thousand babies are born with a hearing disability or otherwise known as hearing impairment. (…)
It is a fact that every child learns and develops at different speeds and in various ways. However, there are also children who will learn at a much slower pace than other children of the same age. (…)
Child autism or autistic spectrum disorder is a syndrome that results from the combination of certain traits in a child. (…)
It starts with minor memory lapses, like getting people’s names confused or forgetting where you put the keys to the car. (…)
Various physical and mental impairments can hamper or reduce a person's ability to carry out his day to day activities. (…)
In most of the cases, it has been seen that people are likely to be disabled or handicapped for a short period of time. The possibility of long term disability although dim, is not to be ignored. (…)
The expression ‘developmental disability’ stands for the kind of impairment that interferes with a person’s ability to perform one or more vital functions of life. (…)
There are many definitions for disability such as physical disabilities, mental disabilities, cognitive disabilities, and even emotional disabilities. (…)
Disability is when you are unable to live a normal life due to inability to behave normally. There are different types of disabilities that make a person unable to live life like a normal person. (…)
Being less than normal is an excruciating experience that leaves one mentally crippled because every time one steps out and looks around one feels one is less than the normal and has something less than what every other person has. (…)
According to research, one in five people that are of working age are considered as “disabled” by the Government and the Disability Rights Commission (DRC). (…)
Can you imagine yourself being disabled? No, you can’t, can you? It’s hard to imagine yourself being on a state of disability, especially if you are completely normal. (…)
When a person is mentally confused it can hinder the person’s ability to learn. Cluttered minds often find it difficult to concentrate on a single task. (…)
In order to help an Alzheimer's patient, a caregiver must possess patience and a genuine understanding of what the disease really is. Common myths about Alzheimer's disease only add to the stress of an already difficult situation. The more caregivers and family members can learn about this disease, and better understand the problem, the more effort can be put towards helping the patient. (…)