Individual who is Deaf-Blind Law and Legal Definition
According to 29 USCS § 1905 [Title 29. Labor; Chapter 21. Helen Keller National Center for Youths and Adults who are Deaf-Blind], the term "individual who is deaf-blind" means "any individual--
(A) (i) who has a central visual acuity of 20/200 or less in the better eye with corrective lenses, or a field defect such that the peripheral diameter of visual field subtends an angular distance no greater than 20 degrees, or a progressive visual loss having a prognosis leading to one or both these conditions;
(ii) who has a chronic hearing impairment so severe that most speech cannot be understood with optimum amplification, or a progressive hearing loss having a prognosis leading to this condition; and
(iii) for whom the combination of impairments described in clauses (i) and (ii) cause extreme difficulty in attaining independence in daily life activities, achieving psychosocial adjustment, or obtaining a vocation;
(B) who despite the inability to be measured accurately for hearing and vision loss due to cognitive or behavioral constraints, or both, can be determined through functional and performance assessment to have severe hearing and visual disabilities that cause extreme difficulty in attaining independence in daily life activities, achieving psychosocial adjustment, or obtaining vocational objectives; or
(C) meets such other requirements as the Secretary may prescribe by regulation."
Legal Definition list
- Individual Transition Option
- Individual Taxpayer Identification Number
- Individual Support Order
- Individual Shipper
- Individual Shipment [Energy]
- Individual who is Deaf-Blind
- Individual who is Deaf-Blind [Education]
- Individual with a Disability
- Individual with a Severe Disability [Education]
- Individual with a Significant Disability
- Individual With Handicaps