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- Ta’ Pinu Mass for International Day for Persons with Disability
- Flu vaccinations to start on Monday
- Statistics on Dance Schools from 2006 to 2007 are released
- The promotion of mobility among workers with a disability
- Today is the International Day of Families 2008
- Labour Force Survey for July-September 2007 released
- Labour Market Labour Force Survey for October-December
- World Population Day - Statistics for Gozo and Malta
- National statistics on theatres for the year 2006
- Cruise passenger traffic increases in May
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According to the Census of Population and Housing 2005, there were 21,040 persons who stated they had some form of long-term disability. 51.6 per cent of these were males, and the largest proportion - 38.1 per cent - were aged 65 and over. The most common disability was a physical impairment, with 32.0 per cent of the total citing this. This form of disability was the most common for all persons aged 25 and over, whereas for persons aged under 25 visual and intellectual impairments were the most common, followed by physical.
There were a total of 17,640 persons - 12.6 per cent of the total population living in private households - who were living in a private household where a person with a disability also resided. 83.1 per cent of these were living in a household with one person with a disability, 14.9 per cent in a household with two persons with a disability, and the remainder in a household with 3 or more persons having a disability. The majority of persons having a disability were inactive (81.7 per cent), of which 41.7 per cent were retired. 15.3 per cent of these persons said they were employed during 2005.
Between 1991 and 2006, government expenditure on disability benefits as a percentage of government expenditure on all benefits averaged 1.6%. This figure was highest in 1992, where expenditure on disability benefits made up 1.8% of the total.
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