Report: U.S. Unready For
Rise In Disabled
Experts Say Policy Reforms Needed For Growing Population
Of Disabled Americans
April 24, 2007
Experts say the Justice Department
should step up enforcement
of the Americans with Disabilities Act at hospitals and other
health care facilities. (AP)
"It becomes
quite clear that disability will essentially affect the lives of most Americans.
"Alan M. Jette, panel chairman (WebMD) Experts warned in a report Tuesday that
the U.S. is largely unprepared for a coming explosion in its disabled
population.
As many as 50 million Americans currently live with physical or mental
impairments that prevent them from taking on regular work or life activities.
But that number is expected to skyrocket as an aging population and rising
obesity rates take their toll on Americans, concludes a report issued by a panel
at the Institute of Medicine (IOM).
"It becomes quite clear that disability will essentially affect the lives of
most Americans," says Alan M. Jette, the panel's chairman. The panel called on
the federal government to eliminate barriers that can delay medical coverage for
disabled people under Medicare. But it also pointed to a broad range of research
and policy concerns.
Experts say the Justice Department should step up enforcement of the Americans
with Disabilities Act at hospitals and other health care facilities. The law,
which was signed in 1990, guarantees wheelchair and other disabled access to
public buildings. "Even just getting into and around health facilities ... is
really very difficult nowadays," says Lisa I. Lezzoni, a professor of medicine
at the Harvard Medical School Institute for Health Policy and a member of the
IOM panel. The number of elderly Americans is projected to double by 2030, a
factor nearly guaranteed to push up the disabled population, the report says.
Still, obesity lingers as another factor that experts says has them worried.
"The available data was very disturbing to the committee," says Jette, director
of the Health and Disability Research Institute at Boston University. About
one-sixth of U.S. children and two-thirds of U.S. adults are considered
overweight or obese, according to the CDC. That puts them at higher risk for
myriad causes of disability, including stroke, cancer, and diabetes. "It clearly
comes through as a major risk factor," Jette says.