sso
| Hello Guest - login | My Account | My bookshelf | My folders
Kotar website
Julie G Madorsky , MD Before individuals with disabilities won civil rights , they were called invalids . The dictionary defines an invalid as one who is without value , defective , and weakened--just like U . S . vice-presidential candidate Franklin Delano Roosevelt ( FDR ) who had a new social identity thrust upon him when he contracted polio in 1921 . “ Now he is a cripple , " said a friend of his mother , “ will he ever be anything else ?" Suddenly devalued , he might have resonated with this social bias and wondered whether he would be better off dead than alive and disabled . However he went on to disprove stereotypes and to become the only four-time President of the United States . Since the days of FDR , a disability rights paradigm has spread from North America across the globe . No longer do we define a patient as one who is an invalid , ie without validity , rights or potential . As rehabilitation professionals we seek to forge partnerships with our patients in which we are ...  To the book
דיונון הוצאה לאור מבית פרובוק בע"מ

CET, the Center for Educational Technology, Public Benefit Company All rights reserved to the Center for Educational Technology and participating publishers
Library Rules About the library Help