Our Emmanuel Inc

About Us

Company Mission

The mission of Our Emmanuel Inc is to provide innovative, high-quality services that empower people with disabilities to lead meaningful and productive lives as integral members of their families, schools, workplaces, and communities. Our dedicated professionals promote successful community living for individuals, working to enhance their dignity, self-esteem, and overall quality of life. Our goal at Our Emmanuel Inc is to deliver individual-oriented, state-of-the-art, outcome-driven services in a creative and professional manner. This ensures that individuals with disabilities and dual diagnoses can successfully thrive in the community.

Philosophy

The philosophy of Our Emmanuel Inc is rooted in Person-Centered Thinking, a philosophy supporting positive control and self-direction in service provision. Our Emmanuel Inc will implement Person-Centered Thinking through training sessions and other agency-wide initiatives.

Problem Worth Solving

The world is confronted with over a quarter of its population requiring healthcare services. It’s apparent that anyone is likely to experience some form of disability, whether temporary or permanent, at a certain point in life. Disability, although not synonymous with inability, could render the individual incapacitated and dependent without proper care.

Our Emmanuel Inc

Our commitment to individual needs assessment sets us apart as the household name and top choice. We leverage our competitive advantages, including pricing strategies, staff composition, individualized training, and career positioning, to support persons with disabilities.

Our Goal

The goal of Our Emmanuel Inc is to provide individual-oriented, state-of-the-art, outcome-driven services in a creative and professional manner. This is to ensure that individuals with disabilities and dual diagnoses can successfully live in the community.

Our Emmanuel Inc

Family members will not be exempted from our therapy designed to reintegrate persons with disabilities back into the community. We will engage them through training and mentorship, enabling them to support their loved ones in achieving independence. We will employ state-of-the-art technology to enhance and expedite the rehabilitation process for the individual. In summary, our focus will be on rehabilitating individuals into the community.
In terms of competition, our mix of individually tailored assessments, continuous research, lower pricing strategy, and well-informed, trained professionals positions us as a game-changing service provider in the industry. Among our competitors are the Kennedy School, a Catholic archdiocese non-public day school for children ages 6–22 with disabilities, focusing on a team-based approach, offering therapeutic support and transition services. Additionally, the DC Center for Independent Living, a private non-profit organization, gives hope to persons with significant disabilities to live independently by providing peer counseling, individual and system advocacy, and transition services. Another competitor is the DC Assistive Technology Program, aiming to enhance independence, productivity, and inclusion for all District residents with disabilities by providing experience, education, and empowerment in the procurement and use of assistive technology devices and services.

Execution Opportunity Problem

Research indicates that over a billion people worldwide live with some form of disability, which corresponds to more than half of a quarter of the total world population. More significantly, this number is on the rise. We are now faced with over a quarter of the world’s population requiring health care services. Anyone is likely to experience some form of disability, whether temporary or permanent, at a certain point in life. Disability, though not synonymous with inability, could render the individual incapacitated and dependent.
What’s noteworthy is the continuous increase in the number of persons living with disabilities. Although health services do exist for people with disabilities, they are often of poor quality or under-resourced. Disability is extremely diverse—some health conditions associated with disability lead to poor health and comprehensive healthcare needs, while others do not. Nevertheless, all people with disabilities require the same general healthcare needs and should have access to mainstream healthcare services.