A Sitting disability is a condition in which a person may not be able to sit, usually due to pain, but can also happen to persons sitting in wheel chairs. It is also known as the "reduced ability to sit", "sitting problems" or "inability to sit".
Sitting disabilities have generally been an unrecognized disability. The term "sitting disability" is not a well known expression although it is a term used to describe notable symptoms for people with severe back pain. The disabilities usually mentioned in research and legal documents are reduced mobility and visual or auditory impairments.
The specific problems for persons with back problems are usually not addressed anywhere in research, legal documents, accessibility or anti-discrimination laws.
Sitting problems are usually an invisible disability. This combined with the fact that reduced ability to sit is not mentioned in research or anti-discrimination laws, makes it even harder for people to live with this kind of impairment.
A sitting disability is a medical condition that makes a person unable to sit, not unable to move. It is not the inability to sit that prevents a person from being in a building, it is the lack of places to lie down or comfortable reclining chairs. Accommodations for people who have a sitting disability are being enforced as Western nations integrate Universal design into their societies. The Norwegian back pain association has described this in relation to sitting problems in a document to the Government in Norway.
For some medical conditions like Pudendal neuralgia, avoiding activities like sitting, which worsen the condition *, is regarded as crucial. A severe sitting disability requires major life adjustments.
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It uses material from the
"Sitting disability".
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