No thanks

Acceptance. Dignity. Joy. Are you a Fan?

Special Olympics changes lives and brings people together. Stay in touch and receive updates about our work in your community and around the world. We'll send our free e-newsletter, full of inspiring stories and ways you can be a Fan.

Yes! Sign Me Up as a Fan!

*required

Special Olympics - Become a Fan

Special Olympics will not share your email address with anyone unaffiliated with the organization. See our Privacy Policy

No thanks

Thank you for being a fan!

As a Fan you are a part of our global community of athletes and fans, helping to create a more accepting and inclusive world for everyone.

Want to do more?

Be a Fan of Generosity. Help Special Olympics give the power of sport to one more person.

Special Olympics - 2009 Idaho Games

Special Olympics will not share your email address with anyone unaffiliated with the organization. See our Privacy Policy.

Special Olympics Research

Major findings, conclusions and recommendations are drawn from several sources:

  • an independent, comprehensive review of the literature undertaken by scholars at Yale University
  • learned opinions from health and disability experts from various countries
  • administrative data derived from Special Olympics programs; and
  • direct experiences of Special Olympics athletes, their families, program staff, and volunteers.

Promoting Health for Persons with Mental Retardation* — A Critical Journey Barely Begun

This report is the result of an analysis that was undertaken to identify and highlight the health status and needs of persons with mental retardation and to suggest approaches that could be implemented, given current knowledge and technology, to improve both the length and quality of their lives over the coming decade.

Length and quality of life are central concerns of numerous high-level policy initiatives in many countries, including the United States. The launch of the Healthy People 2010 (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, November 2000) initiative marks the third decade of a national commitment to improving the health and wellbeing of Americans.

Consistent with policies of Special Olympics, the findings, conclusions and recommendations in this report have been shared with a number of Special Olympics athletes.

Click here to read this complete report.

* Note: In 2004, Special Olympics updated its official terminology from "mental retardation" to "intellectual disabilities" — previously the term mental retardation was used throughout the Special Olympics movement because of its specific meaning in clinical and academic settings. Other terminology — including cognitive delay, intellectual disabilities, intellectual handicaps, learning disability, mental disabilities and mental handicaps — is used around the world.

While there has been some welcome progress in terms of increased life expectancy and quality of life for  persons with mental retardation over the past several decades, major health gaps remain and health improvement opportunities remain widely underaddressed.
Promoting Health for Persons with Mental Retardation - A Critical Journey Barely Begun