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December 19, 2008 Friday
Updated
Dec 19, 2008
54m disabled in the US

WASHINGTON - MORE than 54 million US residents, or about 19 per cent of the population, have some sort of disability, the US Census Bureau reported on Thursday.

The numbers, based on 2005 data, are up slightly from the 2002 survey when 51.2 million people or 18 per cent reported a disability, the census found.

About 46 per cent of adults aged 21 to 64 with a disability were employed, compared with 84 per cent of adults without disabilities, the survey found.

It also found that:

- 7.8 per cent of people aged 15 and older had difficulty hearing a normal conversation, including 1 million completely deaf people.

- 3.3 million people, or 1 per cent of those aged 15 and older, used a wheelchair or a similar device.

- Nearly 7.8 million people aged 15 and older had difficulty seeing words or letters, including 1.8 million who were completely blind.

- More than 16 million people had difficulty with cognitive, mental or emotional functioning.

- People with a severe disability earned $1,458 (S$2,099) a month on average compared to $2,539 for those with no disability.

- 4.7 million children aged 6 to 14, or 13 per cent, had a disability, mostly a problem doing regular schoolwork. -- REUTERS

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