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Disability Statistics

All States Parties to the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities commit to collecting appropriate information, including statistical and research data, to enable them to formulate and implement policies (Article 31). This page centers disabled people’s expertise and supports data collection that serves disabled communities.

Reliable statistics are fundamental to understanding disability prevalence, disparities, access gaps, and unmet needs. But data must be collected thoughtfully, analyzed carefully, and interpreted with awareness of limitations.


Quality disability data serves multiple purposes:

  • Revealing the size and diversity of disabled populations across different contexts and communities

  • Exposing disparities in employment, education, health, housing, and social inclusion

  • Supporting policy advocacy by documenting needs and outcomes

  • Tracking progress toward inclusion, accessibility, and rights implementation

  • Allocating resources effectively to programs and services

Without good data, disabled people remain invisible in policy decisions and resource allocation.


The Washington Group developed internationally recognized question sets to measure disability prevalence and functioning consistently across countries. Their Short Set of six questions assesses functioning in seeing, hearing, mobility, cognition, communication, and self-care.

Key features:

  • Based on WHO’s International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health (ICF)
  • Designed for comparability across countries and cultures
  • Adopted by the UN Statistical Commission for census and survey use
  • Used in over 100 countries worldwide

The Washington Group also offers extended question sets, child functioning modules (developed with UNICEF), and labor force survey modules.

Website: Washington Group on Disability Statistics

WHO supports disability data collection through several frameworks:

  • Model Disability Survey (MDS): Comprehensive population survey providing detailed information on disability distribution
  • Brief MDS: Shorter version suitable for integration into existing household surveys
  • Functioning and Disability Disaggregation Tool (FDD11): Supports disaggregation of data by disability status

Website: WHO Collection of Data on Disability


Disability data collection often faces significant problems:

  • Using inappropriate or medical-model questions that miss social barriers
  • Underrepresenting certain disabilities (cognitive, mental health, episodic, or less visible conditions)
  • Excluding disabled people from sample frames or making participation inaccessible
  • Relying on proxy respondents who may not accurately represent disabled people’s experiences
  • Misinterpreting functioning data as individual “deficits” rather than outcomes of social barriers
  • Ignoring intersectional disparities (race, gender, socioeconomic status, geography)
  • Aggregating data in ways that hide important differences between disability types
  • Treating all disabled people as a homogeneous group
  • Collecting data without involving disabled communities in design or interpretation
  • Using data to restrict rather than expand rights and access
  • Failing to share findings with the communities studied
  • Privacy and confidentiality concerns, especially for small populations

Best Practices for Researchers and Advocates

Section titled “Best Practices for Researchers and Advocates”
  1. Use validated tools like Washington Group question sets when possible for comparability

  2. Disaggregate data and cross-tabulate by disability status plus other demographics to reveal inequities

  3. Combine quantitative and qualitative methods — statistics alone rarely tell full stories

  4. Make data collection accessible to disabled participants (multiple formats, accommodations, flexible timing)

  5. Engage disabled communities in design, collection, interpretation, and dissemination

  1. Respect privacy and confidentiality, especially when publishing data about small or identifiable populations

  2. Apply social/rights-based frameworks when interpreting data — focus on barriers, not deficits

  3. Acknowledge limitations clearly in any publication or presentation

  4. Share findings with disabled communities in accessible formats

  5. Use data to advocate for policy changes and resource allocation that benefit disabled people




This page centers disabled people’s expertise and supports data collection that serves disabled communities. For questions or to suggest additions, see How to Contribute.


Have lived experience or expertise that could strengthen this page? We especially welcome perspectives on models not well represented here, including those from the Global South and Indigenous communities.

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This page centers disabled people’s expertise and is informed by disabled-led organizing globally. For questions or to suggest additions, see How to Contribute.