xt7ncj87md91 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ncj87md91/data/mets.xml Kentucky. Department of Education. Kentucky Kentucky. Department of Education. 1956-03 bulletins English Frankford, Ky. : Dept. of Education This digital resource may be freely searched and displayed in accordance with U. S. copyright laws. Educational Bulletin (Frankfort, Ky.) Education -- Kentucky Educational Bulletin (Frankfort, Ky.), "The Administration of the Bureau of Rehabilitation Services", vol. XXIV, no. 3, March 1956 text volumes: illustrations 23-28 cm. call numbers 17-ED83 2 and L152 .B35. Educational Bulletin (Frankfort, Ky.), "The Administration of the Bureau of Rehabilitation Services", vol. XXIV, no. 3, March 1956 1956 1956-03 2022 true xt7ncj87md91 section xt7ncj87md91 0 Commonwealth of Kentucky 0 EDUCATIONAL BULLETIN THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE ' " BUREAU OF REHABILITATION SERVICES AFTER REHABILITATION Published ‘by DEPARTMENT EIF EDUCATION ROBERT R. MARTIN Superintendent of Public Instruction ISSUED MONTHLY Entered as second-class matter March 21, 1933, at the post office at Frankfort, Kentucky, under the Act of August 24, 1912. VOL. XXIV MARCH, 1956 NO. 3 FOREWORD I am pleased to submit a brief presentation of the activities of the Bureau of Rehabilitation Services. These activities are designed to provide Rehabilitation service to the disabled, of working age in Kentucky. During the past year a great deal of study has been directed to the situation of the disabled, with the result that a greater emphasis is being given to Rehabilitation service and the solution of its many and varied problems. Accidents, disease, and congenital conditions at birth result in many hundreds of Kentuckians becoming disabled each year. The future growth and development of Rehabilitation in Ken- tucky will be dependent in large part on the expansion of existing facilities and the establishment of new ones to serve the Handi— capped. The program is growing in its value and quality of work each year. May I suggest the careful, reading of this bulletin with the thought that the Bureau of Rehabilitation Services stands ready at- all times to render any service possible to the Handicapped of our State. Robert R. Martin, Superintendent of Public Instruction Q§?U%‘YTQ>EICUUJFUO SO] L01 2ies of signed age in ted to phasis many suit in 1 Ken- (isting [Iandi- ? work th the ady at of our STAFF BUREAU OF REHABILITATION SERVICES Name Position COFFMAN, BEN F. .............. HEAD REED, JOHN S. .................... CHIEF, REHABILITATION SERVICES BALDREE, W. HICKMAN....CHIEF, PLANNING AND COORDINATION BANKS, FONTAINE, JR._._.ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT FLEGE, R. FRED __________________ AREA SUPERVISOR ALLEN, LINDSEY E. ........ A REA SUPERVISOR CRANMER, T. V. _________________ SUPERVISOR, SERVICES FOR THE BLIND LEONARD, DR. T. P... ...II.VIEDICAL CONSULTANT JONES, HOWARD P. ____________ SUPERVISOR, OASI RAMSEY, DR. JAMES ........ MEDICAL CONSULTANT, OASI TAYLOR, WENDELL .......... OASI COUNSELOR GARDENHIRE, HENRY ...... OASI COUNSELOR FIELD OFFICES LOCATION ADDRESS REHABILITATION COUNSELOR Louisville, 2 1510 Heyburn Building William E. Wilson Louisville, 2 1510 Heyburn Building Harry T. Greschel Louisville, 2 1510 Heyburn Building Eugenia Linton, Supervisor Business Enterprises Program Covington Area Vocational School Robert E. Lawrence Madisonville State Office Building Robert E. Traylor Bowling Green State Office Building Mrs. Bessie R. Baskett Paducah 111/2 West Center Street Will Young Lexington State Office Building Mrs. Ruth B. Forman High and Upper Streets Lexington / State Office Building Fred Gissoni High and Upper Streets Blind Placement Specialist Ashland State Office Building Archie K. Stott Ashland State Office Building Dawson D. Dugan Paintsville Mayo State George Mason Vocational School Harlan Cornett Building John M. Burkhart Box 664 Somerset Vocational School Flenor M. Heath ' College Street Louisville, 2 1510 Heyburn Building John B. Voor Blind Placement Specialist 57 INTRODUCTION On the basis of national estimates, the number of persons in Kentucky with long-term disabilities would total about 100,000— approximately one of every thirty persons. The 100,000 disabled citizens of Kentucky can be categorized as follows: 60% 14-64 yrs. Non-Institutional 80% STATUS AGE Causes of Disability—Disease, particularly chronic disease, is the cause of about 88% of all disabling conditions. Accidents of all kinds, in the home, on the highways, in employment, account for about 10% of the total problem of disability. The other 2% result from congenital conditions: Accidents (10 %) Congenital Conditio (2 % ) Disease (88%) Disease 88% On the basis of the 100,000 persons with long-term disabilities in Kentucky, there are about 36,000 disabled persons in Kentucky who 58 tilt int ter 0th hai rat imI if t the se, is of all .t for cesult (10%) l Conditil“ 38%) .ities in ky who are not now engaged in gainful employment because of their dis- abilities, but who could do productive work if they were provided services they need. The economic hardship resulting from disability is frequently even greater than that created by old age or death of the family breadwinner. Not only. does the individual lose wage income, but his family must meet the costs of medical care. Few persons, even those receiving moderately high salaries, can accumulate enough to finance prolonged periods of income loss, Savings and other per— sonal resources are soon exhausted, and often the sufferer and his family are forced upon public relief. Analysis of relief rolls reveals that disability is the largest single cause for application for relief. It is estimated that federally- aided public assistance programs are helping about 1 1/3 million per- sons in the nation whose need is attributed primarily to disability. The estimate would be in the neighborhood of 1.5 million if those being helped by general assistance under State and local programs were included. Omitting those disabled among the aged and in— cluding the disabled on the general assistance programs, it is esti- mated that the State and Federal Governments are spending about half a billion dollars a year to maintain around one million persons on public assistance as a direct result of disability——some 325,000 of these are the dependent children of disabled parents. Disability affects the life of the family as well as that of the individual. The disabled individual frequently experiences a de- terioration of his basic skills, loses his self-confidence, and becomes despondent. Frequently unable to participate in the normal life of the family and the community, he may become maladjusted because of a feeling of inequality, lack of prestige, and other concomitants of “not belonging.” If there is a disabled individual in the family, it also may affect the whole family life. Someone may have to give up working to care for the disabled individual. The social life of others in the family may have to be adjusted so there is someone in constant attendance. Frequently the disabled individual may have to leave home and go to an institution for long-term care, sepa- rating him from his family and breaking up the family unit. Of the 100,000 disabled persons in Kentucky, 36,000 could have immediate rehabilitation services and could be placed in employment 1f the State Rehabilitation Agency had a staff adequate enough for the demand. These disabled persons are found in all communities 59 l in Kentucky. They are in the cities, and they are on the farms. They are the more than 200 workmen of the 1,000 workers seriously injured in industrial accidents. Some are among the 5,700 disabled parents (5,400 fathers) of the more than 50,000 children, who, be- cause of their parents’ disabilities, are supported under the Ken- tucky Aid to Dependent Children Program. Still others are among the 3,000 persons who are blind and who are supported under the _ State Aid to the Needy Blind Program. Some will be found in the estimated 5,500 disabled persons who would meet the criteria for Aid to the Permanently and Totally Disabled. And, finally, they will be found among the 7,653 patients in the State Mental Hospitals, and among the 2,000 patients in the State and County Tuberculosis Hospitals and Sanatoria. ORGANIZATION The State Rehabilitation Program is administered by the Bu- reau of Rehabilitation Services, a Bureau of the State Department of Education, with central offices located in Frankfort, Kentucky. There is a Head of the Bureau, who is responsible to the Super- intendent of Public Instruction for the overall rehabilitation pro- gram. The Bureau Head is assisted by an Administrative As- sistant, a Chief of Rehabilitation Services, a Chief of Planning and Coordination, a Supervisor of Services for the Blind, and two Area Supervisors. ' The Rehabilitation Program is administered through ten dis- trict offices, located throughout the State, with each office staffed with a trained Counselor and a steno-clerk. In addition to the regular rehabilitation counselors, there are two Blind Placement Specialists, and one (Severely Disabled Counselor.) The Kentucky School for the Blind, and the Kentucky Industries for the Blind are a part of the Bureau of Rehabilitation Services. REHABILITATION Rehabilitation is the process of restoring handicapped persons to the fullest physical, mental, social, vocational, and economic use- fulness of which they are capable. This process of rehabilitation takes an individual from a place on relief rolls, or dependency 011 relatives, to that of an employable person paying taxes and making a definite contribution to his society and community. A program of rehabilitation should be designed to adjust and train disabled per- sons for remunerative employment in occupations in which they are 60 arms. .ously .abled o, be- Ken- .mong er the ‘ in the ia for :y will pitals, iulosis 1e Bu- rtment .tucky. Super- n pro- ve AS- 1g and 0 Area en dis- staffed to the cement :ntucky ind are persons nic use- ilitation ency 011 taking a gram 0f led per- they are best fitted to earn a living. The philosophy underlying the rehabili- tation service is predicated on the theory that the extension of special services to the handicapped will assist in equalizing their opportunities with normal persons. During the past centuries social orders have looked with con- tempt upon the members of their society who were physically or mentally handicapped. Ancient societies destroyed their disabled by throwing them to the crocodiles of the Ganges, or by leaving them on mountain tops to be devoured by the beasts of the fields and fowls of the air. A handicapped person, unable to grow his crop or defend his society, was looked upon as a risk to the safety and economic well being of the group. Although the handicapped were permitted to live during the middle ages, they were objects of ridicule and jesting. They were left at the gate to beg. Earliest organized social interest in the welfare of the disabled came in the 18th Century in the form of custodial care. The first institution to devote its entire resources to the care of the disabled was organized in Orbe, Switzerland, in 1780. Not until the 19th Century was any effort made to educate the physically handicapped person. In this Century it has been found that many disabilities can be removed or substantially reduced to adjust the disabled for employ- ment who otherwise would have been liabilities instead of assets. Someone has said—“The highest expression of a civilization is the provision society makes for its unfortunate persons.” Those of us who have never heard through deafened ears, never looked through vision dimmed eyes, never talked with a stammering tongue, never felt a strange flutter of the heart, never dropped a crutch, nor felt an empty sleeve dangling at our side, will ever know the full meaning of the word “handicapped” in this process called life. In the United States, the first organized attempt by society to assist the handicapped began during the early 1920s. WHO IS ELIGIBLE FOR REHABILITATION SERVICES Any citizen of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, over 16 years of age, with a disability which constitutes a vocational or employ— ment handicap, is considered eligible for State provided rehabilita- tion services. Once a person either requests or is referred for re- habilitation services, a Counselor by a personal interview and a 61 4 | 1 l I i diagnosis of the persons’ mental and physical disability, must determine whether his disability can be aided by rehabilitation services, and, then, a doctor on the staff of the State Rehabilitation Agency must state whether or not medical or rehabilitation services will make the individual employable. \Vhen these two requirements are met, then a person may receive the services provided by the Agency. It is necessary to consider several things in determining eligi— bility for specific service, such as the clients education, age, aptitude and abilities, physical capacities, experience and background. For example, a person with poor grades in mathematics would not be a good case for Engineering as a training objective, where mathe— matical calculations are required. Placing a disabled person in a work situation where his physical debility would be further ag— gravated, or where his intellectual capacities would be totally inade- quatc for the responsibility, thereby making him unhappy and dis- satisfied with his job, are examples of poor rehabilitation practices. WHAT IS BEING DONE FOR THE I-IANDICAPPED IN KENTUCKY Although Kentucky has not been able to keep pace with most states in the rehabilitation program, due to the lack of funds, there has been great progress in providing rehabilitation services during the past three years. Several qualified rehabilitation counselors and blind placement specialists have, been added to the staff of the State Rehabilitation Agency. Legislative appropriations have increased approximately 54% over the past six years. Increased emphasis has been placed on the severely disabled. During the past year 459 Kentuckians were rehabilitated into profitable employment. This group of disabled citizens have now become contributors to their community. Through employment they are paying taxes instead of depending on relief agencies. Rehabilita— tion is no longer a hit or miss method of record keeping on people. It is a scientific procedure all the way from the first interview until rehabilitation service is terminated. Medical review is made of all cases before rehabilitation services begin. The economic status of all clients is closely evaluated. The educational, social, environmental, and vocational factors are fully measured in the overall rehabilitation process. 62 mmvw-dp—Iv—i Rab—4A y—I-aH 71W: 0 D a: 9.11/2 gi- ost ere ing ind ate sed has .nto 10w hey im- ple. ’iew ices The ully FINDING THE DISABLED As stated earlier in this bulletin, there are approximately 100,000 disabled persons in Kentucky. The State Rehabilitation Agency must know who the disabled are before services can be pro- vided. In many respects the finding and proper referral of the disabled is one of the most important aspects of the rehabilitation procedure. The State Agency maintains referral systems with all agencies with which disabled persons might come in contact, such as public schools, health departments, insurance groups, welfare offices, labor organizations, State Employment Service, civic clubs, doctors, hospitals, and others. Many disabled people make personal appli— cation directly to the district offices, the locations of which are shown elsewhere in this bulletin. A good referral system requires that the cooperative arrange— ments between the various agencies be thoroughly understood. In many instances, this calls for a written agreement of cooperation in which understandings are spelled out in regard to what type of individuals will be referred, at what time, in what way, and what services are to be provided. An effective referral system requires, also, that the agency maintain continuing contact with the personnel of the referring agency to interpret to them the rehabilitation pro- gram, the kinds of clients it serves, and the kinds of services it provides. The principal requirement for making this kind of referral system work is regular and frequent contacts. For example, state agency rehabilitation counselors have a regular program for dis- cussng cases with the referral agencies. As the basis for providing an individualized plan of rehabilita— tion services to the client, the rehabilitation counselor makes a thorough diagnostic evaluation of each applicant, to identify and to evaluate the client’s disabilities, and total disabilities, that may be developed and capitalized upon in order to prepare him for a job objective, which the client will be helped to select. During the 1954—55 fiscal year, 459 individuals were rehabilitated t0 the extent of assuming employment. The following chart indi- cates the source of referral and the number referred: Interested Individuals 98 Public Assistance 98 Self 40 63 l The age groups of the 459 rehabilitants consisted of the fol— Public Welfare Physician Public Schools United Mine Workers Artificial Limb Companies Crippled Children’s Agency Kentucky Employment Service Labor Unions T. B. Sanatorium U. S. Employment Service Public Health Public Officials County Health Units Business Colleges Red Cross Chamber of Commerce Hospitals Veterans Administration Social Security News Items “Taverlcy Hills Sanatorium Hazelwoocl Sanatorium \Vorkshop for the Blind Ohio State Rehabilitation Kentucky School for the Blind Department of Economic Security Goodwill Industries Private Schools lowing: 16—20 73 46-50 21-25 38 51—55 26-30 45 56-60 31-35 40 61—65 36—40 47 66—70 41—45 59 71-75 In the fiscal year 1952, the State Agency had 722 rehabilitated. Before rehabilitation, wages were the major source of support for only 124. Seventy—three were on public relief, and eight were on private relief. Families supported 326 of the total number. Annual 64 l—ll—ll—‘l—‘l—‘i—‘LOODOOW oowi-P-mqsowcnxi 54 49 26 15 10 3erson ome a would ts are aniza- noney a1 and re de— iave a . be of de the ve for itation proper neces— )titude ,idanee handi- tivities iple, it ye dis- just as harmful to counsel an individual who is affected with bronchial asth- ma to work in dusty places. A great deal of freedom, however, is given to the individual in choosing his life work with two thoughts in mind—that of protecting his physical health and of preparing him in the best possible way to perform satisfactorily on the job. PHYSICAL RESTORATION AND ARTIFICIAL APPLIANCES Physical restoration services are provided for those whose physical disabilities can be removed or substantially improved, so that they can be made employable or more suitably employed. These services include surgery, hospitalization, medical and therapeutic ' treatment. They are purchased only from institutions, and individu- als who are qualified in their particular fields and are approved by the medical profession. An important phase of the physical restoration is the provision of prosthetic appliances. The principal items included in this group are artificial arms and legs, artificial eyes, hearing aids, plastic surgical appliances, braces and wheelchairs. They are provided only for those whose financial circumstances prevent them from purchasing same for themselves. The client, in all cases, will be required to apply whatever funds he may have available. The pur- chase of an appliance is contingent upon direct employment set up in each individual client’s plan and not made promiscuously without regard to employment. It should not be inferred that provision of all medical services are a part of the rehabilitation process. A medical problem becomes a part of the rehabilitation process only when the condition is such that it has limited the individual’s functioning so severely that his daily provision of counseling, medical, placement, and other services are needed in order to restore the individual to his former employ- ment or other daily activities. OCCUPATIONAL TOOLS AND EQUIPMENT After an individual has been physically restored and adequately trained for a job, he may need certain additional services in order to get the kind of job for which he has been trained. Rehabilitation agencies often assist in the purchase of the tools an individual needs, or they purchase for the client a needed occupational license. In some instances, the individual’s plan may call for him to operate his own small business. The client must be helped financially or other- wise to acquire the equipment needed for such enterprise. 67 TRAINING A11 important means of preparing handicapped individuals for employment is through vocational training. A few rehabilitation centers maintain vocational shops and classes to train their clients for a selected job objective. The Kentucky Rehabilitation Agency maintains contact with all approved training institutions and fa- cilities in the State, and sends clients to them for training. Handicapped individuals have the same range of aptitude and interests as other individuals. Therefore, the State Rehabilitation Agency is able to assist a client in securing training at any level from the professional to the semi-skilled or non-skilled. The training facilities most frequently used are colleges, universities, business colleges, private trade schools, and vocational schools. Specialized training courses are often instituted for such disability groups as the blind, the tuberculous, the mentally retarded, and others. Such classes are needed to help many disabled persons to develop greater physical tolerance, good work habits, and right attitudes toward employment. A necessary part of a complete training program is the provision of funds for the client’s living maintenance while undergoing a course of training, other necessary expenses incurred in connection with training, or for the provision of books and train- ing supplies, and transportation to the place of training. The cost of training services is not conditioned upon the client’s inability to pay for it himself. All fees, tuition, and instructional costs, are provided eligible cilents without regard to financial status. Training supplies, (such as books, laboratory instruments, etc), however, are not provided if the client is financially able to purchase them. Maintenance costs during the training period are primarily the responsibility of the disabled person or his parents or guardian. If such costs cannot be provided by the client or parents, and cannot be obtained from any other source, the Rehabilitation Agency may assist with the aid necessary to provide maintenance. The kinds of training are as broad as the occupations in which the handicapped are employed. Training is, and continues to be, one of the important functions of rehabilitation services. Every disabled individual needs to be trained to know a skill, trade, or occupation in which he can earn a living. l ices 1 that and men1 and s ist a that ploy a cli job man as \V Re] for ;ion :nts ncy and ion svel ,ing Less zed the uch tter ard 1 is hile red ain- nt’s D113]. tus. .c.), Last? the If not nay rich ons be 'n a PLACEMENT AND ADJUSTMENT The last step in the rehabilitation process is to provide the serv- ices needed to place the client in employment. The placement service that is always given is to consult with the client regarding a job and to advise him as to how and where he should apply for employ- ment. If the client does not have the capacity for finding a job opening and selling himself to an employer, a rehabilitation placement special- ist assists him in so doing. Adequate placement service requires that continuous contacts be maintained with a Wide range of em- ployers and personnel managers. A rehabilitation counselor visits a client at periodic intervals after he has been placed on a suitable job to determine whether he is making a proper adjustment. In many instances the follow-up counselor interviews the employer, as well as the client, to assure that the placement is satisfactory. Rehabilitation restores the interest in leisure activities as well as occupational proficiency. 69 “5517‘ urbaamfiuw <3 . E4?» 4... .M3& waxing“ J ~ “Law 61%; W M ¢ 1 A a; ' M x.» Mm wfi’fia fiw‘ficfi‘fl Q‘fii‘flj (7% ”4.6 so , 7744.11304 5X 4"" ’1:an 712% 91-9113 5/ Jimmy Lyon ‘ ‘4 A LAWYER OF THE COMMONWEALTH m '13 CD >1 '3- oH'S-D 95‘ EMEFEQE g ”"f‘sfs‘ sign SERVICES FOR THE BLIND Services for the Blind includes the Kentucky Business Enter- prises Program, and a staff offering a program of rehabilitation services to the eligible blind of the state. Expansion of services was made possible through an Extension and Improvement Provision of Federal Law No. 565. A Placement Counselor for the Blind, responsible for serving clients in the Eastern Area of the state, was added to the staff. Additional funds, federal and state, were made available for case service in this area. This increase in staff made it possible to confine the activities of the existing Placement Counselor to the Western area of the state, thus permitting more concentrated service. Coincident with the Extension and Improvement Project, plans were initiated for altering the relationship between the Placement Counselors and the overall Rehabilitation Program. For the first time, staff members responsible for the placement of blind clients were authorized to participate in the preparation stages of the Re- habilitation process. The Extension and Improvement Project permits the develop— ment of rural farm and rural non-farm placement of the blind. A training program was established with the Bryant and Strat- ton Business College of Louisville for the purpose of training blind. persons in the field of machine transcribing. Through this program blind persons are familiarized with the standard type of office dic- tation and transcribing equipment, taught typing, and to make erasures Without sight. This is the only program of its kind in the state. Early in the year, a milestone in placement was reached when the first blind rehabilitation client was placed in the Federal Civil Service as a transcriber with the Veterans Administration in Louis- ville. Since this placement, two other rehabilitation clients have passed Civil Service examinations, although placement has not fol- lowed. In addition to the rehabilitation services of physical restoration, training, occupational tools and equipment, vocational counseling, and placement services, for the blind renders various services to blind clients which are incidental to their rehabilitation. For several years White canes, provided by the Lions Clubs, have been distributed 71 by the Placement Counselor; and brief instruction in travel is given whenever indicated. The Placement Counselor is frequently asked for information about talking books, library services, recording services, and special appliances designed for the use of the blind. These services could be more adequately provided through a home teaching program for the blind. KENTUCKY BUSINESS ENTERPRISES PROGRAM The Kentucky Business Enterprises Program is currently oper- ating twenty—seven vending stands, which provide con