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              Your search returned 82 Solutions

              • In a hospital, a healthcare professional and a mother share a moment of joy with a young girl using a wheelchair. The girl’s radiant laughter reflects dignity and connection, emphasizing the importance of empathy and inclusion in medical care.

                Inclusion of persons with intellectual disabilities in public hospitals

                Programa ASI, by Fundación Personas with the Regional Government of Castilla y León, adapts hospitals and day centres for people with intellectual disabilities and autism. It uses ASI cards, IT alerts, QR protocols, easy‑language materials and nurse case managers. It serves 3,000+ people/year with 8.9/10 satisfaction.
                Fundación Personas, Programa ASI – Atención Sanitaria Integral, Spain

              • The photo shows a woman and a child using sports wheelchairs in an open plaza outside the Riyadh Air Metropolitano stadium. They participate confidently in an inclusive activity alongside others nearby.

                Leading football club delivering accessibility and joy for all fans

                Atletico Madrid's A stadium for all makes the Metropolitano accessible for fans with disabilities. The club uses tactile tables, audio description, sign language, 500 dedicated seats, accessible ticketing and trained staff. Programs and partnerships (Fundación ONCE, NGOs, UEFA) support inclusion.
                Atlético de Madrid, A Stadium for All, Spain

              • Children and young people in warm jackets explore nature closely on a rainy day, guided by caring adults. Their curiosity and teamwork reflect the importance of accessibility in outdoor education—where every child can participate, learn, and connect with the world.

                Making festivals and cultural events inclusive by and for neurodivergent persons

                Antilén’s model helps neurodivergent people attend festivals and cultural events. It offers easy-read guides, preparatory resources, on-site support circles led by neurodivergent professionals, and sensory tools. Since 2023 it reached 6,000+ people, 20+ events and trained 18 teams.
                Coporación Antilén, Modelo de Accesibilidad Cognitiva y Apoyo Sensorial, Chile

              • Two swimmers, one with Down syndrome and her instructor, share a joyful moment in the pool. Their expressions of confidence and teamwork show how inclusive sports foster equality, health, and belonging through shared effort and encouragement.

                A Local Network Redefining Everyday Inclusion Through Sport

                Goals UAE Network, founded by a parent in 2014, trains coaches in Universal Design so people with and without disabilities can play together. It runs weekly mixed-ability sessions across Abu Dhabi, is free to families, and delivered 1,740 training hours in 2025.
                Goals UAE, Goals UAE Network, United Arab Emirates

              • Sensory and calming school architecture improving well-being for students and staff

                Heerup School was rebuilt 2021–2024 as a sensory‑adapted, inclusive school (1,610 m² building, 4,100 m² outdoor). Calming materials, simplified layouts and new furniture cut physical disputes and staff sick days by 50% and student isolation by 30%.
                Heerup School, Heerup School, Denmark

              • A student presents confidently in front of classmates, demonstrating sign language beside a display introducing the “Kalimani App.” This scene celebrates African innovation and accessibility in education, promoting communication and inclusion for Deaf learners.

                Sign language-based learning tools built for children in underserved African countries

                The Kalimani App is an AI-powered learning app in Tanzanian Sign Language for Deaf children and their teachers. It offers animated sign videos, interactive exercises, voice-to-sign conversion and offline access. Since 2022 it reached 5,600+ learners and trained 150+ teachers.
                The Jenga Hub, Kalimani App, Tanzania

              • A diverse group of people in Japan poses after a workshop on disaster preparedness for individuals with disabilities. They hold colorful posters filled with notes, symbolizing collaboration and inclusive planning that ensures everyone’s safety and dignity in emergencies.

                Emergency preparedness curriculum led by persons with psychosocial disabilities

                Led by people with psychosocial disabilities, Porque ran 30+ workshops (2023–mid-2025) training 2,000 people (1,600 with disabilities). It created a 21-step Inclusive Preparedness Checklist, 1,000+ downloads, and guidance used in three municipal manuals.
                Porque, the Organization of Persons with Psychosocial Disabilities, Disability-led Disaster Preparedness, Japan

              • The main functions of the Inclusive Evacuation and Shelter Assessment System, including the estimation of disaster evacuees, percentage of disabled people, sheltered persons, shelter space, inclusive supply, and the display of accessible shelter information.

                Government platform for inclusive disaster planning using simulations and demographics

                Government-funded digital platform in Taiwan that combines hazard simulations, historical typhoon records and demographic data to plan accessible evacuation and shelter needs. Adopted by 22 cities and 7,700 villages and used in over 27,000 planning instances.
                National Science and Technology for Disaster Reduction, Inclusive Evacuation and Shelter Assessment System, Taiwan

              • A diverse group of professionals, including a person using a wheelchair, attends a conference in a modern meeting hall. The setting conveys accessibility, equality, and the representation of people with disabilities in policy and decision-making spaces.

                Cross-sector partnerships for healthcare access of patients with intellectual disabilities

                Equal Treatment improves access to secondary and tertiary healthcare for people with intellectual disabilities. Networks, hospitals and a multi-country advisory board co-developed policy recommendations, e-learning and in-person training. Pilot in four countries showed 70% professionals and 30% students improved skills. Funded by Erasmus+ (€250,000).
                European Platform for Rehabilitation, Equal Treatment, Finland

              • A diverse group of performers, including people with disabilities, gather joyfully on stage holding flowers. Their expressions radiate unity and celebration, embodying how the arts bring people together in creativity, equality, and shared humanity.

                Transforming performing arts through leadership of artists with disabilities

                Europe Beyond Access (EBA) transforms European performing arts by placing Deaf and disabled artists in leadership, curation and governance. With a €4 million budget co‑funded by Creative Europe, EBA supported 650+ artists in 110 activities and 40+ works. The project drives lasting reforms in recruitment, accessibility and board representation.
                Skånes Dansteater, Europe Beyond Access, Sweden