Disability Impacts All of Us

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Description
Title: Disability Impacts all of us
- Communities
- Health
- Access
Up to 1 in 4 (27 percent) adults in the United States have some type of disability. Graphic of the United States displaying figures of people with a disability and people with no disability.
Percentage of adults with functional disability types:
- 12.1 percent of U.S. adults have a mobility disability with serious difficulty walking or climbing stairs.
- 12.8 percent of U.S. adults have a cognition disability with serious difficulty concentrating, remembering, or making decisions.
- 7.2 percent of U.S. adults have an independent living disability with difficulty doing errands alone.
- 6.1 percent of U.S. adults are deaf or have serious difficulty hearing.
- 4.8 percent of U.S. adults have a vision disability with blindness or serious difficulty seeing even when wearing glasses.
- 3.6 percent of U.S. adults have a self-care disability with difficulty dressing or bathing.
Disability and Health
Adults with disabilities are more likely to have obesity, smoke, have heart disease, and have diabetes:
- 41.6 percent of adults with a disability are obese while 29.6 percent of adults without a disability are obese.
- 21.9 percent of adults with a disability smoke while 10.9 percent of adults without a disability smoke.
- 9.6 percent of adults with a disability have heart disease while 3.4 percent of adults without a disability have heart disease.
- 15.9 percent of adults with a disability have diabetes while 7.6 percent of adults without a disability have diabetes.
Disability and Health Care Access
Health care access barriers for working-age adults include
- 1 in 4 adults with disabilities 18 to 44 years do not have a usual health care provider
- 1 in 4 adults with disabilities 18 to 44 years have an unmet health care need because of cost in the past year
- 1 in 5 adults with disabilities 45 to 64 years did not have a routine check-up in the past year
Making a difference
Public health is for all of us.
Join CDC and its partners as we work together to improve the health of people with disabilities.
- Building inclusive health program
- Improving access to health care
- Promoting healthy living
- Monitoring public health data
- Researching and reducing health disparities
View infographic and references at: www.cdc.gov/disabilities/
Contact us: disabilityandhealthbranch@cdc.gov
References
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Disability and Health Data System (DHDS) [Internet]. [updated 2023 May; cited 2023 May 15]. Available from: http://dhds.cdc.gov