It is not only 61-year-old retiree Harold Tan who struggles when he takes his intellectually disabled daughter Dawn to a polyclinic.
Doctors are also ill-equipped to communicate with the 22-year-old because people with intellectual disabilities are less able to express themselves, and their health problems can end up being treated poorly or even go undiagnosed.
The Movement for the Intellectually Disabled of Singapore (MINDS) Developmental Disabilities Medical Clinic was opened officially on 21 March.
The first clinic of its kind here, it offers specialised medical attention and has helped 100 people with intellectual disabilities since its soft launch in July 2017.
The clinic promotes preventive healthcare using standard health screenings and examinations. It does not prescribe medication. Instead, patients will get referrals to polyclinics on an appointment basis.
The clinic’s services are free for the 2,400 intellectually disabled clients under MINDS. There are also plans to open it to intellectually disabled members of the public in the future.
One of the clinic’s three founders is Dr Bhavani Sriram, vice-president of the Asia-Pacific Down Syndrome Federation. She has worked with children with intellectual disabilities as a paediatrician at KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital, where she found a lack of healthcare services for them after they become adults. She is now the only volunteer doctor at the clinic, but MINDS hopes to find more.
The clinic is located at Kembangan-Chai Chee Community Hub.
At its opening on World Down Syndrome Day (21 March 2018) was President Halimah Yacob, who called it a “safe environment” for the intellectually disabled to get treatment.
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Source: The Straits Times, 22 March 2018