Mental Retardation Incidence in Yokohama City
Akiko YOSHIDA, Tomoko SUGANO, Takeshi MATSUISHI,
Department of Special Education, Faculty of Education and Human Sciences,
Yokohama National University
In this paper we calculate the incidence of mental retardation in the 17 year-old population of Yokohama City during 1996, based on information provided by the Yokohama City Welfare and Education Offices. The studied group includes 17 year-old individuals as of May 1, 1996 enrolled for third year education in the high school department of the Special School for Mental Retardation, and mentally retarded individuals born during the same period of time (year), living in Yokohama City.
The total number of individuals enrolled in the high school department
of the Special School for Mental Retardation, those who underwent education
in special education class in general school during the compulsory education
period due to mental retardation, those enrolled in handicapped, hearing
impaired or vision impaired schools with mental retardation, and those
whose education has been postponed or have been excused due to mental retardation
add up to 297. (It has been confirmed that approximately 70% of these individuals,
with presumptive mental retardation, have been recognized by the city's
Welfare Office.) The total number of 17 year-olds in the city is approximately
40145. Based on this information (mental retardation: 297, total population:
40145) a mental retardation rate of 0.74% at 17 years of age has been calculated
for Yokohama City. Considering these individuals have completed their compulsory
education up to basic high school, completed by age 15, it is hard to obtain
detailed information from the Education Office except for those enrolled
in special education schools. Moreover, the Education Office doesn't carry
out strict intellectual examinations out of respect for the children's
rights. Therefore, the mentioned calculations are not completely exact.
In Japan, after completing obligatory education, most individuals with
mental retardation enroll in special high schools such as handicapped,
hearing impaired, vision impaired, or special workshops, but others stay
home, are hospitalized, or get a job. Thus, they walk very different paths.
So it is difficult that we get hold of all cases of person with mental
retarded.
In any way, the reason why we choose 17 year-old population in this investigation is that in this age, the specialized section of the Welfare Office carries out the process of integral recognition of the condition taking into account intellectual capacity using strint intellectual examination and physical ability, due to the following two reasons:1. The condition can be recognized precisely in this age group according to medical and psychological diagnosis due to the evident (established) symptoms of mental retardation at this age. 2. The responsibility of the administration regarding children and people with mental retardation is transferred completely from the Education Office to the Welfare Office.
However, this integral recognition including strict intellectual examinations
only carried out in cases where the patient or his parents request it.
Besides, in cases where the patient displays multiple conditions and has
requested previous recognition of another condition, mental retardation
is no longer apparently;recognized. Thus, the incidence obtained from the
Welfare Office information is not the medical incidence of mental retardation.
As we have described, determining the exact number of mentally retarded
individuals is a difficult task. This limits our study. This study was
based on information provided by the Welfare Office, which performed the
exact diagnosis of the condition, and by the Education Office, in an attempt
to include individuals who do not need the social welfare aid due to mild
mental retardation or other causes. However, we can't deny the results
of our study aren't absolutely exact. The exact incidence can be greater
that 0.74%.
The Japanese Health and Welfare Ministry investigation results serve as
reference. The investigation was applied to randomly selected individuals,
and reported a mental retardation incidence of 0.3%. However, these results
are not very dependable since the study was based on self-declaration.
The AAMR declare that the incidence is 2.3% to 3% according to the theoretical
statistical value. The Textbook of Comprehensive Psychiatry, a representative
U.S. textbook, reports under 1% incidence. According to Ireland's intellectual
disability database, the incidence is 0.73%, and the simple type certificate
issuance rate for mental retardation by the Welfare Office of Yokohama
City is 0.57% (if employed, this certificate entitles the owner to financial
assistance from territorial entities, along with tax, health and other
benefits.)
Mental retardation is frequent in children and people with other conditions. Therefore, it is crucial for state and territorial entities to determine the exact incidence in order to develop welfare policies, guarantee adequate quality of life for individuals with this condition, and establish social security programs, including education and employment. Medicine benefits from this information too, enabling the development of prevention and attention programs. It is therefore expected that efforts from different sectors converge to create a study and generate an exact incidence figure.
Kanagawa Medical Psychiatrist Society
Ordinary session No. 127,Date: Saturday November 21, 1998
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