ACCOUNTING FOR DISABILITY - CUSTOMER FEEDBACK OR CITIZEN COMPLAINTS

Citation
D. Pilgrim et al., ACCOUNTING FOR DISABILITY - CUSTOMER FEEDBACK OR CITIZEN COMPLAINTS, Disability & society, 12(1), 1997, pp. 3-15
Citations number
8
Categorie Soggetti
Rehabilitation,"Social, Sciences, Interdisciplinary
Journal title
ISSN journal
09687599
Volume
12
Issue
1
Year of publication
1997
Pages
3 - 15
Database
ISI
SICI code
0968-7599(1997)12:1<3:AFD-CF>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
This paper has two aims. First, it will summarise the findings of a st udy of the views and experiences of adults with acquired physical impa irments. This entailed taking open-ended accounts from respondents in order to elicit their concerns and experiences. The paper will focus o n two aspects of data from the study: views about health and social se rvices; and those about citizenship. The second aim of the paper is to situate the role and status of personal accounts of disability within the health and social policy context of recent years, which has been characterised by both consumerism and an intensification in the activi ties of the disability movement. In the run up to the 1990 NHS and Com munity Care Act, it became clear that the purchasers (now 'commissione rs') of health and social services would be encouraged to elicit users ' views of services, to engender a needs-led not provider-led approach . Later in the paper we will discuss the relationship between this off icially endorsed consumerism and the concerns of disabled people when voicing their views. It will be argued that personal accounts of disab ility have gained a cultural currency because of the convergence of pr ocesses linked to consumerism within recent British health and social policy on one side and new social movements on the other.