It is okay to use words or phrases such as “disabled,” “disability,” or “people with disabilities” when talking about disability issues. Ask the people you are with which term they prefer if they have a disability. When in doubt, call a person with a disability by his/her name.

When speaking to a disabled person you should?

General Etiquette Tips

  1. Practice the Golden Rule. Treat everyone as you would like to be treated.
  2. Always Ask Before Giving Assistance. Just because a person has a disability, they don’t necessarily need or want your assistance.
  3. Think Before You Speak.
  4. Avoid Showing Pity or Being Patronizing.

Can a disabled person talk?

General Recommendations for Communicating with All Persons with Disabilities: Talk to persons with disabilities in the same way and with a normal tone of voice (not shouting) as you would talk to anyone else. Ask the person with a disability if assistance is needed; do not assume that help is needed until you ask.

What is the correct term for someone who is disabled?

Use ‘disabled people’ not ‘the disabled’ as the collective term. Don’t automatically refer to ‘disabled people’ in all communications – many people who need disability benefits and services don’t identify with this term. Consider using ‘people with health conditions or impairments’ if it seems more appropriate.

Is mental illness considered a disability?

Mental illness is a disability when it disrupts performance and negatively influences a person’s day-to-day activities. The degree and extent that a person’s functioning is impaired is another important factor in defining mental health disability.

How do you calm down a disabled person?

  1. SPEAK DIRECTLY. Use clear simple communications.
  2. OFFER TO SHAKE HANDS WHEN INTRODUCED.
  3. MAKE EYE CONTACT AND BE AWARE OF BODY LANGUAGE.
  4. LISTEN ATTENTIVELY.
  5. TREAT ADULTS AS ADULTS.
  6. DO NOT GIVE UNSOLICITED ADVICE OR ASSISTANCE.
  7. DO NOT BLAME THE PERSON.
  8. QUESTIONS THE ACCURACY OF THE MEDIA STEREOTYPES OF MENTAL ILLNESS.

How do you say mentally challenged in a nice way?

“Mentally disabled” is okay. So is “intellectually disabled” or “cognitively disabled”. Sometimes we speak of “delays” or “learning delays”. As others have pointed out, the preference today is to refer to the person first, and then to the disability.

Is mentally disabled politically correct?

See mental health entry . Mentally retarded: Always try to specify the type of disability being referenced. Otherwise, the terms mental disability, intellectual disability and developmental disability are acceptable. See entry on mentally retarded/mentally disabled, intellectually disabled, developmentally disabled .

Why do people not talk to people with disabilities?

It’s frustrating for someone with a disability to have to deal with people never talking directly to them if they have an assistant or a translator present. Equally, talk to a person in a wheelchair, rather than the person standing next to them. Their body may not be working fully, but it doesn’t mean their brains aren’t!

What’s the proper way to talk about someone with a disability?

Using phrases like “person with a disability” and “individual with an amputation” emphasizes the person and not his or her condition. Within its ” Publication Manual ,” the APA also urges writers as well as speakers to avoid using any language that refers to disability in a deleterious or pejorative manner.

Is it disrespectful to call someone a disabled person?

Identifying someone by their disability or assigning a label that is offensive (such as crippled or handicapped) is both hurtful and disrespectful. Always be careful of the things you say, censoring your language if necessary. Avoid names like moron, retard, cripple, spastic, midget, etc., at all times.

When to refer to someone who does not have a disability?

When referring to someone who does not have disability… When referring to someone who does not have intellectual, psychosocial or cognitive disability… * Some people with autism identify as autistic people, or do not find the term ‘autistic’ offensive, because they consider autism an identity beyond the medical diagnosis.