Servicio de detección temprana de niños y niñas con discapacidad visual :análisis del proceso en cuatro hospitales estatales de la provincia de El Oro

The province of El Oro is recognized among the most important in the country in which the agricultural trade and exploitation of precious minerals is concerned and has had some years of welfare and development under the generosity of its fertile land and cozy. In the province of El Oro, the National...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Autores: Mogro Tinizaray, Juana Narcisa, Santillán Cruz, Víctor Manuel
Formato: tesis de maestría
Estado:Versión publicada
Fecha de publicación:2010
País:Ecuador
Recursos:Universidad Politécnica Salesiana
Repositorio:Repositorio Universidad Politécnica Salesiana
Idioma:español
OAI Identifier:oai:dspace.ups.edu.ec:123456789/10471
Acesso em linha:http://dspace.ups.edu.ec/handle/123456789/10471
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palavra-chave:EDUCACIÓN ESPECIAL
CIEGOS
EDUCACIÓN
ASISTENCIA INSTITUCIONAL
Descrição
Resumo:The province of El Oro is recognized among the most important in the country in which the agricultural trade and exploitation of precious minerals is concerned and has had some years of welfare and development under the generosity of its fertile land and cozy. In the province of El Oro, the National Council on Disabilities - CONADIS has 9,995 registered people with disabilities in general, of which 886 a visual impairment; but these data do not reveal the actual number of people visually impaired since many infants with this limitation They are not registered by CONADIS. In hospitals in the province of El Oro there is no record of newborn infants who have disabilities, because a functional assessment is performed or visual detection process comprehensively child, to stimuli it receives from the surrounding environment after birth, any aspect physiological, biological, psychological and social baby and if we add the Children born at a disadvantage because they are many mothers especially in rural areas that light up their children in their own homes and do not account for children born with disabilities, the number of CONADIS would rise significantly.