| Literature DB >> 26404637 |
Dimitrios Skempes1,2, Jerome Bickenbach3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rehabilitation care is fundamental to health and human dignity and a human right enshrined in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. The provision of rehabilitation is important for reducing the need for formal support and enabling persons with disabilities to lead an independent life. Increasingly scholars and advocacy groups voice concerns over the significant barriers facing people with disabilities in accessing appropriate and quality rehabilitation. A growing body of research highlights a "respond-need" gap in the provision of rehabilitation and assistive technologies and underscore the lack of indicators for assessing performance of rehabilitation systems and monitoring States compliance with human rights standards in rehabilitation service planning and programming. While research on human rights and health monitoring has increased exponentially over the last decade far too little attention has been paid to rehabilitation services. The proposed research aims to reduce this knowledge gap by developing a human rights based monitoring framework with indicators to support human rights accountability and performance assessment in rehabilitation. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26404637 PMCID: PMC4582732 DOI: 10.1186/s12914-015-0063-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Int Health Hum Rights ISSN: 1472-698X
Fig. 1Analytic process for the development and selection of human rights indicators. Detailed legend: The participatory research process for developing and selecting rights based rehabilitation indicators involves five sequential steps: experts consultation preparation including sampling and recruitment of stakeholders, indicators brainstorming, indicators sorting and rating, participant data analysis, collective interpretation of results. Abbreviations: CRPD, Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities; GCM, Group Concept Mapping