Measuring Discriminatory Social Norms Against Children With Disabilities to Improve Communication-Based Programs

In the Europe and Central Asia region, there are at least five million children diagnosed with some type of disability. These children are likely to be subjected to stigmatization and marginalization, which can lead to discrimination and reduction in access to social services. A pilot study was deve...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sarah C. Stevens, Suruchi Sood, Nicole Mertz, Kelli Kostizak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fcomm.2020.541901/full
id doaj-8b00c7c22de04388b092d763d38f3001
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8b00c7c22de04388b092d763d38f30012020-12-21T06:58:27ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Communication2297-900X2020-12-01510.3389/fcomm.2020.541901541901Measuring Discriminatory Social Norms Against Children With Disabilities to Improve Communication-Based ProgramsSarah C. StevensSuruchi SoodNicole MertzKelli KostizakIn the Europe and Central Asia region, there are at least five million children diagnosed with some type of disability. These children are likely to be subjected to stigmatization and marginalization, which can lead to discrimination and reduction in access to social services. A pilot study was developed to examine factors affecting the treatment of children with disabilities from a holistic, systematic perspective. Stratified by the social ecological model, 450 respondents participated in a structured interview designed to measure knowledge, attitudes, norms, marginalization, and stigma. The results yielded four conclusions. First, it showed that professionals did not rate differently on the constructs of the conceptual model when compared to nonprofessionals. Second, norms are likely affecting the treatment of children with disabilities. Third, the study shows that there is not enough emphasis on educating and involving community members to improve the treatment and protect the rights of children with disabilities. Finally, the results emphasize the importance of approaching disability from a comprehensive social ecological perspective.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fcomm.2020.541901/fulldisabilitieschildrensocial normsdiscriminationcommunicationmeasurement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah C. Stevens
Suruchi Sood
Nicole Mertz
Kelli Kostizak
spellingShingle Sarah C. Stevens
Suruchi Sood
Nicole Mertz
Kelli Kostizak
Measuring Discriminatory Social Norms Against Children With Disabilities to Improve Communication-Based Programs
Frontiers in Communication
disabilities
children
social norms
discrimination
communication
measurement
author_facet Sarah C. Stevens
Suruchi Sood
Nicole Mertz
Kelli Kostizak
author_sort Sarah C. Stevens
title Measuring Discriminatory Social Norms Against Children With Disabilities to Improve Communication-Based Programs
title_short Measuring Discriminatory Social Norms Against Children With Disabilities to Improve Communication-Based Programs
title_full Measuring Discriminatory Social Norms Against Children With Disabilities to Improve Communication-Based Programs
title_fullStr Measuring Discriminatory Social Norms Against Children With Disabilities to Improve Communication-Based Programs
title_full_unstemmed Measuring Discriminatory Social Norms Against Children With Disabilities to Improve Communication-Based Programs
title_sort measuring discriminatory social norms against children with disabilities to improve communication-based programs
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Communication
issn 2297-900X
publishDate 2020-12-01
description In the Europe and Central Asia region, there are at least five million children diagnosed with some type of disability. These children are likely to be subjected to stigmatization and marginalization, which can lead to discrimination and reduction in access to social services. A pilot study was developed to examine factors affecting the treatment of children with disabilities from a holistic, systematic perspective. Stratified by the social ecological model, 450 respondents participated in a structured interview designed to measure knowledge, attitudes, norms, marginalization, and stigma. The results yielded four conclusions. First, it showed that professionals did not rate differently on the constructs of the conceptual model when compared to nonprofessionals. Second, norms are likely affecting the treatment of children with disabilities. Third, the study shows that there is not enough emphasis on educating and involving community members to improve the treatment and protect the rights of children with disabilities. Finally, the results emphasize the importance of approaching disability from a comprehensive social ecological perspective.
topic disabilities
children
social norms
discrimination
communication
measurement
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fcomm.2020.541901/full
work_keys_str_mv AT sarahcstevens measuringdiscriminatorysocialnormsagainstchildrenwithdisabilitiestoimprovecommunicationbasedprograms
AT suruchisood measuringdiscriminatorysocialnormsagainstchildrenwithdisabilitiestoimprovecommunicationbasedprograms
AT nicolemertz measuringdiscriminatorysocialnormsagainstchildrenwithdisabilitiestoimprovecommunicationbasedprograms
AT kellikostizak measuringdiscriminatorysocialnormsagainstchildrenwithdisabilitiestoimprovecommunicationbasedprograms
_version_ 1724375387671101440