Might I suggest that instead of just posting articles or links to articles, that you could say what
your opinion of them is.
Generally speaking the convention is to hold the poster in agreement with an article he or she posts
unless the content of the email expresses to the contrary as per example "have you seen URL x, the
content is disgraceful"
So do you agree with this alternative model or not.
Personally I do not think even factorial models can be given the dignity of being considered more
ecologically valid and more scientific in any real sense.
On rough aquintance (I don't have time to study the model more at present) I regard it as somewhat
open to the same criticisms as the medical model in that it still weights for impairment as being a
determinant of disability allowing for notions of degree of impairment. So many things wrong it
would take a small chapter of a book to really do justice to my thinking on this.
Larry
> -----Original Message-----
> From: The Disability-Research Discussion List
> [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Colin REvell
> Sent: 21 February 2008 10:52
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: [danmail] Patrick Fougeyrollas and Socio-Ecological
> Perspective (model) of disability
>
> PART I - DISABILITY PERSPECTIVES AND DATA SOURCESConceptual
> Models and Classification SystemsEcological PerspectiveThe
> ecological perspective arose in the 1970s, but became more
> prevalent inthe mid-1990s in response to criticism of the
> impairment and functionallimitations perspectives. Like the
> latter perspective, the ecologicalperspective rests on three
> distinct disability concepts: pathology (orabnormality),
> impairment and disability. However, it sees disability
> asresulting from the interaction of impairment, activity
> limitations andparticipation restrictions in a specific
> social or physical environment suchas work, home or
> school.The Quebec disability production process model
> (processus de la productiondu handicap) was developed by a
> team at Université Laval in Quebec, led bysocial scientist
> Patrick Fougeyrollas. The Quebec model, which
> contributedgreatly to the review and eventual improvement of
> the ICIDH, rejects thelinear cause-and-effect explanation of
> disability. This model presentsdisability as the interaction
> of three kinds of factors: personal factors(age, sex and
> cultural identity), environmental factors (the social
> contextin which the person lives) and life habits (the
> person's daily activities).The Quebec model shifts the focus
> from a fixed impairment that is part of aperson's organic
> system to other, more changeable factors that affect
> thatperson's participation in society. In the Quebec model,
> disability dependson the environment in which a person lives
> and carries out daily activities.If the environment is
> adapted to the person, the disability can change oreven
> disappear.There are many variations of the social model, but
> all portray disability asa social construct created by
> ability-oriented and ability-dominatedenvironments. The
> social model rejects the linear causality. According tothe
> social model, even though impairment has an objective reality
> that isattached to the body or mind, disability has more to
> do with society'sfailure to account for the needs of persons
> with disabilities.The human rights model is a distinct
> subgroup of the social model. Itunderstands disability as a
> social construct. The model is primarilyconcerned with the
> individual's inherent dignity as a human being (andsometimes,
> if at all, with the individual's medical characteristics).In
> response to criticism leveled at the ICIDH classification
> system, the WHOrevised it, releasing the latest revision in
> May 2001 under a new name, theInternational Classification of
> Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF).The ICF illustrated
> a clear shift: from describing disability, impairmentand
> handicap in terms of diminishment to describing body
> structure,functioning, activities and participation in an
> objective way.The general term functioning refers to all body
> functions, activities andparticipation while the term
> disability, is understood to encompass theinteraction between
> impairments and externally imposed activity limitationsor
> participation restrictions.One of the ICF's main objectives
> is to establish a common language forcoding a wide range of
> information on health and health-related conditions,including
> disability. This standardized language makes it easier to
> compareconditions across nations, disciplines and sciences.
> Although the ICF isstill relatively new, it has become
> accepted worldwide as a substantialimprovement over the
> ICIDH. Many disability organizations and persons
> withdisabilities participated in the development of the ICF.2
> Saad Z. Nagi (1965). "Some conceptual issues in Disability
> andRehabilitation". In M. Sussman (ed.). Sociology and
> Rehabilitation.Washington, DC: American Sociological
> Association. PP. 100-13.
>
> Patrick Fougeyrollas papers on the web:-
> www.cihi.ca/cihiweb/en/downloads/Patrick%20Fougeyrollas%20-%20
> ICF%20in%20Surveys.pdf
>
> www.riglobal.org/events/documents/Djerba_Fougeyrollas_ICFPaper
> _2007.pdf
>
> www.ophq.gouv.qc.ca/documents/Integration-ete_2005_ang.doc
> Read wikipedia information 'Ecosystem model/ecological
> models'
> link:-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecological_modelYou may
> also want to access following
> links:-http://www.isec2005.org.uk/isec/abstracts/papers_m/mcil
roy_g.shtmlhttp://rtc.umn.edu/self/sddefinition.asphttp://ocw.jhsph.edu/courses/SocialBehavioralFoun
dations/PDFs/Lecture2.pdfhttps://www.haworthpress.com/>
store/Toc_views.asp?TOCName=J198v03n04_TOC&desc=Vol\ume%3A%203
> %20Issue%3A%204http://www.goldlearningcentre.com/conference1.h
tmlhttp://www.anzhealthpolicy.com/content/1/1/4http://informationr.net/ir/5-4/paper79.htmlhttp://mtd
h.ruralinstitute.umt.edu/Publications/Model.htmhttp://>
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&
> list_uids=9\161925&dopt=Abstracthttp://findarticles.com/p/arti
> cles/mi_m0825/is_n1_v62/ai_18562559http://www.isrl.uiuc.edu/~c
hip/pubs/disappearance.shtmlhttp://vaw.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/7/1/60http://eric.ed.gov/ERI
CWebPortal/custom/portlets/recordDetails/detailmini.js>
p?_n\fpb=true&_&ERICExtSearch_SearchValue_0=EJ581236&ERICExtSe
> arch_SearchType_0=eric_\accno&accno=EJ581236http://www.blackwe
> ll-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1365-2788.1997.tb00690.xhttp:
> //www.ingentaconnect.com/content/routledg/cdso/2000/00000015/0
> 0000001/art00\009?crawler=truehttp://psy.st-andrews.ac.uk/peop
> le/personal/mc1/resources/modules/vuneralbility.\pdf
>
>
> http://www.balancedweightmanagement.com/TheSocio-EcologicalMod
el.htmhttp://www.stepstoahealthierclarkco.org/docs/steps_sustainability.pdfhttp://www.faht.scot.nhs.
uk/fifepublichealthdataset/domains.dochttp://www.preve>
ntconnect.org/wiki/index.php?title=Socio-ecological_Modelhttp:
> //data.unaids.org/pub/Presentation/2007/understanding%20risk%2
> 0and%20behaviour%20a%20socio-ecological%20model%20%20_en.pdfht
> tp://www.sfph.org/papers/social_enterprise_health_improvement_
> oct06/Multidisciplinary%20Public%20Health%20and%20Social%20Eco
> nomy.pdfhttp://www.hsc.wvu.edu/som/cmed/ophp/ppts/Bossarte%20-
> %20PH%20Grand%20Rounds.ppt.
> Taken from following
> souce:--http://www.hrsdc.gc.ca/asp/gateway.asp?hr=/en/hip/odi/
> documents/Definitions/Def\initions003.shtml&hs=hzeColin Revell
> _________________________________________________________________
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