U.S. Census Bureau
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        EMBARGOED UNTIL: 12:01 A.M., EST, MARCH 16, 2001 (FRIDAY)

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Housing and Household Economic 
Statistics Information Staff
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             Nearly 1 in 5 Americans Has Some Level of Disability,
                          U.S. Census Bureau Reports


  Nearly 1 in 5 persons -- 53 million people -- said they had some level of
disability in 1997, while 1 in 8 -- 33 million -- reported they had a severe
disability, according to a report released today by the Commerce Department's
Census Bureau.

  These data should not be confused with results of Census 2000, which are
being released over the next three years.

  "Since the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1990, the Census
Bureau has collected data that make it possible to relate disability status to
a range of other variables, including income, employment, health insurance
coverage and the receipt of program benefits," said Census Bureau analyst
Sharon Stern about the report, Americans With Disabilities: 1997.

  The Census Bureau defines a person with a disability as someone who has
difficulty in performing functional tasks or daily living activities or meets
other criteria, such as a learning or developmental disability. People are
considered to have a severe disability if they are completely unable to
perform one or more of these tasks or activities, need personal assistance or
have one of the severe conditions described in the report.

  The report found that the presence of a severe disability brings with it an
increased likelihood of receiving welfare benefits, having low levels of income
and being more likely to live in poverty. Also, individuals with a severe
disability are less likely to be covered by health insurance than those with no
disability. Among people 25-to-64 years of age having a severe disability, only
48 percent had health coverage, compared with 80 percent for people with a 
nonsevere disability and 82 percent of those with no disability.

  Other highlights:

  - Among the population age 15 and over, 25 million had difficulty walking a
    quarter of a mile or climbing a flight of 10 stairs or they used an
    ambulatory aid, such as a wheelchair (2.2 million) or a cane, crutches
    or a walker (6.4 million).
  
  - About 18 million individuals age 15 and over had difficulty lifting and
    carrying a 10-pound bag of groceries or grasping small objects.

  - About 7.7 million people age 15 and over had difficulty seeing the words
    and letters in ordinary newspaper print (even with glasses).
  
  - About 14.3 million people age 15 and over had a mental disability, including
    1.9 million with Alzheimer's disease, senility or dementia; and 3.5 million
    with a learning disability.
  
  - The poverty rate among the population 25-to-64 years old with no disability
    was 8 percent, compared with 10 percent for people with a nonsevere
    disability and 28 percent for people with a severe disability.

  - In 1997, 9.7 million people age 16 to 64 had a disability that prevented
    them from working and another 7.2 million were limited as to the kind or
    amount of work they could do.

  These data were collected in late 1997 from approximately 32,000 households in
the panel of the Survey of Income and Program Participation that started in
1996. As in all surveys, these data are subject to sampling variability and
other sources of error.
-X-


Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Public Information Office
301-763-3030

Last Revised: April 03, 2001 at 11:59:13 AM

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