New Disability Action Plan confirmed for 2023 as minister meets Paralympians and opens pioneering lab at Olympic Park
Plan to build on government’s leading work improving the lives of disabled people in areas such as technology, sport and global leadership.
- Minister for Disabled People, Health and Work opens new Disability Innovation Hub ahead of International Day of Persons with Disabilities
- Minister met with GB Paralympians as Government sets out plans to boost the participation of disabled people in sport and physical activity
A new Disability Action Plan will be consulted on and published in 2023, the government confirmed today (02 December 2022).
The announcement follows the Minister for Disabled People, Health and Work, Tom Pursglove MP, officially opening the brand-new Global Disability Innovation Hub (GDI Hub) research lab at the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park to mark the UN International Day of Persons with Disabilities (IDPD).
The new Disability Action Plan will set out the practical action ministers across government will take over the next two years to improve disabled people’s lives.
The policies in the Disability Action Plan will be further developed in the New Year, with a consultation expected in 2023, so that disabled people, disabled people’s organisations and other interested parties can have their say.
Announcing the government’s intention to develop and consult on a new Disability Action Plan at the event, the minister detailed why he thought a new Disability Action Plan was needed.
Minister for Disabled People, Health and Work, Tom Pursglove MP, said:
Over one in five people in the UK are disabled. It’s vital we continue to take concerted action across government to improve disabled people’s lives.
I’ll be bringing forward our Disability Action Plan in 2023 to build on government reform of the disability agenda, underlining our global leadership on disability rights and leading the way in areas such as assistive tech and accessibility.
It was inspiring to visit the GDI’s new research lab where this type of innovation is in action – unlocking opportunities so that more disabled people can reach their potential.
The United Nations is marking this year’s IDPD by focusing on innovation and transformative solutions to create accessibility and equality, with London’s GDI Hub – the world’s first centre on assistive technology to collaborate with the World Health Organisation – forging the path internationally to improve disabled people’s lives.
The GDI Hub will be researching and creating a new generation of advanced technologies, ranging from Artificial Intelligence-powered navigation aids for visually impaired people, to using mobile communication to strengthen disabled communities.
While at the Olympic Park the minister was also welcomed to the Aquatics Centre by Paralympians, including Susannah Rodgers and Grace Harvey, to tour the state-of-the-art infrastructure and accessibility features. They spoke of their experiences competing at last year’s Paralympics and what it meant to them, as well as the impact of the London Olympics 2012 legacy work by the British Paralympic Association.
Further Information
- The government will publish more detail on the Disability Action Plan ahead of consulting on plans in 2023.
- The United Nation’s International Day of Persons with Disabilities (IDPD) is on Saturday 3 December. The theme is “Transformative solutions for inclusive development: the role of innovation in fuelling an accessible and equitable world”.
- GDI Hub is made up of the University College London-led, Academic Research Centre and the associate non-profit Community Interest Company. It is a research and practice centre driving disability innovation, working with 70 partners across 41 countries.
- GDI Hub’s brand-new research lab is at the new University College London (UCL) East campus at the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. At present the UK’s GDI Hub is split across two sites in Bloomsbury and the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. This is the new ‘Future Living Center’ of UCL.
- The GDI Hub was founded in the legacy of the 2012 Paralympic Games. It is both an academic research centre driving disability innovation, led by University College London, and a community interest company. Research focuses on themes of inclusive design, assistive technologies, and disability arts, sports and inclusive culture. It is the world’s first centre on assistive technology to collaborate with the World Health Organisation.
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