Children with Disabilities

Obesity Problems of Physically Disabled Children

When a child’s body mass index registers above the 85th percentile, or his weight exceeds 20 percent over the recommended number for his height, doctors consider him obese. Because childhood obesity often results from a lack of physical activity, disabled children can develop it because of their physical limitations. These children also face more serious health consequences from obesity than non-disabled kids carrying the same amount of extra weight.

All About Children with Disabilities

Swimming for Disabled Children

Swimming provides resistance training, is easy on the joints and improves coordination. Swimming constitutes an official sport for a number of professional disability organizations including Disabled Sports USA and the National...

Exercise for Children With Disabilities

Depending on the nature of the child's disability, certain exercise regimens are not feasible, but there are many alternative exercises to keep disabled children active. Along with increased physical health, the right exercise ...

Pool Exercises for Disabled Children

Pool exercises can help keep disabled children active and physically fit . They range from floating exercises to water walking exercises. While it is possible for a disabled child to perform pool exercises unassisted, most will...

How to Include Multi-Disabled Children Into Activities

When you're planning activities for children, it can be challenging to find ways to include both multi-disabled children as well as those with regular abilities. But a disability doesn't need to lead to segregation. With the ri...

Grants for Children of Disabled Parents

When one or both parents become disabled, there is often a question about how their child's education will be paid. Luckily, there are a number of grants that are available specifically for children who have a parent, or even a...

SSI Benefits for Children of the Disabled

There is an application and eligibility process that must be completed to determine if a person is eligible for benefits. Children of the person receiving benefits may also be eligible to receive benefits.

Sports Programs for Disabled Children

Disabled children can compete in sports through programs designed with their special needs in mind. National sports programs for disabled children have local branches throughout the United States. Activities may include basketb...

Disabled Children's Grants

Disabled children face a wide range of challenges depending on the kind and severity of their disability. Some of the things disabled children need, like medical care and education, can be much more expensive than they are for ...

Power Wheelchairs for Children

Power wheelchairs have been around since the early 20th century, and have made life easier for many people living with disabilities. Power wheelchairs allow for more mobility, especially for children, many lacking the strength,...

Children & the Disabilities Act

The ADA also applies to those who "have a relationship or association with an individual with a disability," according to the Justice Department. This makes it so that parents, too, are covered by the accommodations that the A...

Grants for Kids in Need

Children have a wide range of needs, including food, shelter, medical care and appropriate education. For kids in need, these basic requirements of living may be difficult or impossible to find. Luckily, a number of organizatio...

How to Apply for Disability Benefits for Children

Once your child has been diagnosed with a lifelong or long-term disability, Social Security benefits may be available to help offset medical, educational and living expenses. Raising a disabled child is difficult enough without...

Group Homes in Tennessee for Disabled Kids

Group homes for disabled children are often run by private organizations rather than government entities. The agencies work together to provide a beneficial, nurturing environment for the children to grow in. The Tennessee Bapt...

Toilet Training for Disabled Children

Knowing how and when to potty train your child is commonly an issue that challenges parents with special-needs children, according to Mark Wolraich, author of "American Academy of Pediatrics: Guide to Toilet Training." Determi...

Schools for Physically Disabled Children

When a child's health problems cause physical disabilities, his parents might consider placing him in a school for the physically disabled. While traditional school districts do provide as many services as they can for these st...

Scholarships for Disabled Parents

With the cost of college tuition steadily increasing, more and more students are turning to scholarship funding to help relieve some of the financial burden. If you're a parent with a disability or the child of a disabled paren...

What Is IQ and How Is It Measured?

Intelligence is an abstract concept that is virtually impossible to measure. Intelligence includes not only factual knowledge but also abstract thinking, logic and reasoning. Standard IQ tests attempt to measure intelligence th...

What Are the Positive Aspects of IQ Tests?

The term IQ was devised by the German psychologist William Stern as a way to measure the intelligence of children. The term IQ is still in use today and two common IQ tests are the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children and t...

First Day of School Tips for Children With Disabilities

According to Kids Health, children with disabilities have the same educational rights as any other child and knowing and understanding what is necessary to ensure a successful school year will help parents transition their disa...

Child Disability Evaluation Process for SSI Benefits

Children under the age of 18 are eligible for Supplemental Security Income, or SSI, payments, if they meet the Social Security Administration's definition of disability and if their resources---including family income---fall wi...

What Is a Group Home?

A group home can provide a permanent or temporary haven for people with disabilities, displaced children and incapacitated seniors, as well as people transitioning out of mental hospitals and jails. Group homes may be structure...

Kitchen Equipment for Disabled People

Often, the adaptations make the kitchen easier for the able-bodied to use as well. From simple gadget to major remodels, families have many options when choosing kitchen equipment. In addition to the disabled, accessible kitch...

Assistive Technology Devices for Children

Assistive technology devices help children with learning or physical disabilities function and participate in education despite their respective limitations. Assistive devices can help students improve reading, hearing or gener...

About Children's Wheelchair Accessories

Wheelchairs for children should not be considered mere modes of transport. For many kids with disabilities, their chairs are a big part of their world. Any mobility device should be customized to the individual user's needs to ...

How to Cope With a Developmentally Delayed Child

Developmental delays refer to a child's delay in meeting expected milestones in their early years. These delays may relate to motor, social, language or cognition skills and abilities. Some delays may be temporary, such as hear...

The Individual Education Plan (IEP)

These related services can include speech pathology and audiology, psychological services, physical and occupational therapy, recreation and extracurricular activities, early identification and assessment of disabilities in chi...

3 Ways to Determine Hydrocephalus Life Expectancy

Most children who were born with hydrocephalus, as well as those who developed it as adults, would eventually die from the condition, usually sooner rather than later. Kids who didn't die were usually left severely disabled. Li...

5 Things You Need to Know About Children With Disabilities

Many disabilities affect children. Some of these disabilities, such as Down syndrome or physical disabilities, are easy to notice. Other disabilities, such as learning disabilities or hearing loss, aren't noticeable. This is b...