World News from Macau |
||
|
"A society where everyone, regardless of background or disability, feels welcome, included and supported" |
||
|
|
Disability evaluation leading to 'mistakes' (By Vítor Quintã, 11.01.12) The government should change the way it evaluates the level of impairment of people applying for the new disability allowance, the head of the Macau Special Olympics (MSO) said yesterday. An excessive focus on intelligence quotient (IQ) and social skills testing is leading to "mistakes" in the medical classification of disabled people, Hetzer Siu Yu Hong told Macau Daily Times. Last September the Social Welfare Bureau (IAS) began accepting applications for the new disability allowance and free health care services. "It's a good thing and it shows that authorities are paying more attention to people with disability," said Siu. Applicants must go through a medical assessment process, after which their impairment can be categorised in six types – visual, hearing, speech, physical, intellectual and mental, and in four separate degrees – mild, moderate, severe and profound. In addition, the MSO director stressed that the equipment and tools used to carry out the tests were bought in Taiwan. "Unlike what happens in Hong Kong, these tools are not from Macau and they were not adjusted," he said. Almost 9,500 people had already submitted an application for the new registration system, the IAS director Iong Kong Io said yesterday, according to Chinese-language TDM. The government was expecting to grant the new disability subsidy to 10,000 Macau permanent residents, totalling MOP 80 million annually. Source: http://www.macaudailytimes.com.mo/ |
|
| MDAA gratefully acknowledges funding provided by the Australian Government through the Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs, as well as Ageing, Disability and Home Care, Department of Human Services NSW. |
|
|
For Telephone Interpreter Service - Call 13 14 50 |
|
|
PO Box
9381, Harris Park NSW 2150, Australia |
Phone
(02) 9891 6400 | Fax (02) 9635 5355 |
|
|
|