The Disability Discrimination Act says that a disabled person is someone with a physical or mental 'impairment' which has 'a substantial and long-term adverse effect upon their ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities'. The exact meaning of this is important in deciding whether you count as disabled for the purposes of the law. If you want to make a claim that you have been discriminated against because of a disability, you may need an expert medical opinion to back you up.
A 'substantial adverse effect' is something which limits your ability in more than a minor or trivial way. 'Normal day-to-day activities' are things that most people can do on a fairly regular basis, such as:
But they don't include things like:
'Long-term' means the effect:
This means that, for example, if you have problems getting around because you have a broken leg, which is likely to heal within 12 months, you would not normally count as a person with a disability.
'Impairment' includes:
The Act lists eight kinds of ability and says that if your condition affects one or more of these, your ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities will be affected. They are:
Some special cases
If your disability comes and goes, it counts as 'long-term' if the 'substantial adverse effect' is likely to come back 12 months or more after it started. If you have had a disability, you are protected from discrimination even if you no longer have it.
If you have an illness which is likely to get worse so that it eventually has a 'substantial adverse effect', you are covered by the Act from the time your illness began to affect your abilities. This includes, for example:
What doesn't count as a disability
Certain conditions are not counted as 'impairments' under the Disability Discrimination Act.
Two examples are:
If you are not sure about whether a disability you have counts as an impairment under the Act, contact the Disability Rights Commission (see 'Further help').