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The Disabled are Able to Have Sex

The Disabled are Able to Have Sex

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In this episode, sex educator and therapist Melanie Ramey addresses the need for legislation, education, and understanding regarding the sexual health needs of people with disabilities. Only very recently in our history have we had legislation protecting the human rights of those with physical or cognitive disabilities. As recently as the 70s, disabled persons were simply institutionalized and forgotten about. Melanie unpacks the history of how the disabled have been treated and highlights how much more education and support is required to understand the sexual needs of those with disabilities. One poignant story that Melanie relates is that of a woman who had been institutionalized immediately after giving birth to her son, on the advice of a doctor. It was only after the son was in his forties that the state hospital where she lived was about to discharge her into his care. The stigma about mental health was so great that he had not told his wife and children about his mother for fear of judgement. Melanie assisted in helping the family find a suitable care home for the mother and the family integrated her into their lives, but the most shocking discovery was the reason for the mother’s institutionalization: post-partum depression. The truth is that persons with disabilities, be they physical or cognitive, think about and desire sex the same as any other human being. However, persons with disabilities are more likely to be assaulted and their accounts rejected by the police due to difficulties in prosecution. Melanie’s frank discussion on all aspects of sexual health and assault of persons with disabilities highlights the need for better legislation, education, and support from society.Resources discussed in this episode:Episode 2: Don’t Get Sex Education from AristotleWatson Institute: “Sexual Education for Children with Disabilities” by Dr. Rachel SchwartzNPR: “The Sexual Assault Epidemic No One Talks About” by Joseph Shapiro—Contact Melanie Ramey: Instagram: @SexuallySpeakingWithMelanieFacebook: Sexually Speaking with Melanie RameyLinkedin: Sexually Speaking with Melanie Ramey—Canon in D Major performed by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/—TranscriptNarrator: [00:00:06] The human need for intimacy is no different for the disabled than it is for anybody else. Yet society has not treated people with special needs appropriately in this regard, be it for stigma, ignorance or disinterest. Well, it's way past time to safeguard the rights of the disabled by getting these issues on the table. Welcome to the Sexually Speaking podcast with sex educator and therapist Melanie Ramey. Melanie Ramey: [00:00:35] Hello and welcome. If you have been listening to these podcasts, you know that we believe and that we know that we are all sexual beings from the day we're born until the day we die. And that includes everyone. And that includes people with disabilities. They are created as sexual beings, just like the rest of us who may not have a disability. I want to begin today to talk with you about this whole issue, because I think a lot of people are unfamiliar with the manner in which people with disabilities have been treated historically. And I think it's really important to have the context, because actually, until the early 70s, late 70s, if parents with a child who had a physical or a perceived intellectual disability, they were recommended by physicians to place the child in an institution and forget about them. Now, these institutions were often state hospitals that had actually been built for people who were alleged to be mentally ill or insane or whatever. Occasionally states had some kind of facility just for children, but they are the same kind of situation where people were just put and forgotten about. In the late 60s, a deinstitutionalization movement started in this country, and this was the idea that people with mental illnesses or mental problems could be treated in the community. Now, this came about because at the same time, or as a consequence of some research, of course, some medications had been developed that could control some of the mental difficulties that people had and so they could receive medications and live in the community. Melanie Ramey: [00:02:46] The situation was that people who had been in these hospitals for years were suddenly discharged to families, and the families had no idea of what to do. I will never forget a very, very upset client who came to see me, the agency where I worked as a social worker. He had been informed about a week before that his mother, who had lived in the state hospital for 40 years, was being discharged in about a week and that he, as her only child, would be responsible for her. She had been hospitalized shortly after his birth, and through the years, as he grew older, his father told him about her and he visited her in the ...
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