Research

Major Findings

Master
Content

1. Women with disabilities have limited opportunities to establish romantic relationships.

Compared to women without disabilities, women with disabilities were less satisfied with how often they date and perceived more constraints on attracting dating partners.

Even when women with disabilities were outgoing with strong social skills and many friends, their friendships were less likely to evolve into romantic relationships than for able-bodied women.

The large majority (87 percent) of the women with disabilities had had at least one serious romantic relationship or marriage. Fifty-two percent were involved in a serious relationship at the time of the study versus 64 percent of the women without disabilities.

Among the women with disabilities who were not married or in a serious relationship at the time of the study, 42 percent said it was because no one had asked them. Only 27 percent of women without disabilities listed that as a reason for not being in a relationship.

More than half of the women with disabilities believed that disability was not a major cause of the ending of a marriage or other serious relationship.

Only 38 percent of the women with disabilities in this sample had borne children compared to 51percent of women without disabilities.

Women with disabilities were significantly more likely than those without disabilities to stay in a bad marriage for fear of losing custody of their children.

2. Self-esteem in women with physical disabilities is more strongly influenced by social and environmental factors than by the fact of having a disability.

More than three-quarters of the women with disabilities had high self-esteem and a positive body image. Whether the woman had a severe disability or a mild disability, incurred disability earlier or later in life, or had ever been in special education didn't make much difference in self-esteem.

Women who were working, who were in a serious romantic relationship, or who had never experienced physical or sexual abuse reported high self-esteem, whether or not they had a disability. Among women who were not working, not in a serious romantic relationship, or who had experienced physical or sexual abuse, the women with disabilities had much lower self-esteem than the women without disabilities.

3. Abuse is a very serious problem for women with disabilities. They have even fewer options for escaping or resolving the abuse than women in general.

The same percentage (62 percent) of women with and without disabilities had experienced emotional, physical, or sexual abuse, but women with disabilities experienced abuse for longer periods of time.

In addition to the types of abuse experienced by all women, women with disabilities were sometimes abused by withholding needed orthotic equipment (wheelchairs, braces), medications, transportation, or essential assistance with personal tasks, such as dressing or getting out of bed. Women with disabilities face serious barriers to accessing existing programs to help women remove violence from their lives.

4. Women with physical disabilities have as much sexual desire as women in general; however, they do not have as much opportunity for sexual activity.

Ninety-four percent of the women with disabilities had had sexual activity with a partner in their lifetime. Forty-nine percent were sexually active at the time of the study, compared to 61 percent of women without disabilities.

Forty-one percent of the women with disabilities believed that they did not have adequate information about how their disability affects their sexual functioning.

Women with disabilities reported significantly lower levels of sexual activity, sexual response, and satisfaction with their sex lives.

Level of sexual activity was not significantly related to severity of disability.

5. Women with physical disabilities encounter serious barriers to receiving general and reproductive health care.

Thirty-one percent of the women with physical disabilities who participated in this study were refused care by a physician because of their disability.

Women with physical disabilities reported considerable difficulty locating physicians who were knowledgeable about their disability to help them manage their pregnancy.

More women with physical disabilities reported chronic urinary tract infections, heart disease, depression, and osteoporosis at younger ages than the comparison group of women without disabilities.

There was a much higher rate of use of public health clinics, specialists, and emergency departments among women with disabilities compared to women without disabilities.