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Original Articles

Independence: What It Means to Six Disabled People Living in the Community

Pages 27-35 | Published online: 23 Feb 2007
 

ABSTRACT

The hypothesis in this study asserted that independence is an infinitely variable self concept, unique to the individual which concerns control and choice rather than any absolute measure of competence. The study involved interviewing six disabled people who had lived in institutional care for at least three years and had lived in the community for a minimum of one year. The comparative data between life in an institution and living in the community was explored in relation to the concept of independence. The interviewees were able to determine, quite precisely, what independence in the community meant to them. Independence involved choice, control and power in, and over, the management of their lives and the environment in which they lived.

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