# The Epidemiology of Mobility Difficulty in Saudi Arabia: National Estimates, Severity Levels, and Sociodemographic Differentials

**Authors:** Ahmed Alduais, Hind Alfadda, Hessah Saad Alarifi

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/healthcare13151804 · Healthcare · 2025-07-25

## TL;DR

This study examines mobility difficulty in Saudi Arabia, revealing regional and gender disparities and suggesting strategies to improve inclusion.

## Contribution

The paper provides national estimates and sociodemographic analysis of mobility difficulty in Saudi Arabia using the 2017 National Disability Survey.

## Key findings

- Mobility difficulty affects 4.1% of Saudis, with significant regional variation from 2.9% to 9.4%.
- Women and less-educated individuals show higher rates of mobility difficulty.
- Chronic disease is the leading cause, with most individuals living with disability for ≥25 years.

## Abstract

Background: Mobility limitation is a pivotal but under-documented dimension of disability in Saudi Arabia. Leveraging the 2017 National Disability Survey, this cross-sectional study provides a population-wide profile of mobility-related physical difficulty. Objectives: Five research aims were pursued: (1) estimate national prevalence and severity by sex; (2) map regional differentials; (3) examine educational and marital correlates; (4) characterize cause, duration, and familial context among those with multiple limitations; and (5) describe patterns of assistive-aid and social-service use. Methods: Publicly available aggregate data covering 20,408,362 Saudi citizens were cleaned and analyzed across 14 mobility indicators and three baseline files. Prevalence ratios and χ2 tests assessed associations. Results: Overall, 1,445,723 Saudis (7.1%) reported at least one functional difficulty; 833,136 (4.1%) had mobility difficulty, of whom 305,867 (36.7%) had mobility-only impairment. Severity was chiefly mild (35% of cases), with moderate (16%) and severe (7%) forms forming a descending pyramid. Prevalence varied more than threefold across the thirteen regions, peaking in Aseer (9.4%) and bottoming in Najran (2.9%). Mobility difficulty clustered among adults with no schooling (36.1%) and widowed status (18.5%), with sharper female disadvantage in both domains (p < 0.001). Among those with additional limitations, chronic disease dominated etiology (56.3%), and 90.1% had lived with disability for ≥25 years; women were overrepresented in the longest-duration band. Aid utilization was led by crutches (47.7%), personal assistance (25.3%), and wheelchairs (22.6%), while 83.8% accessed Ministry rehabilitation services, yet fewer than 4% used home or daycare support. Conclusions: These findings highlight sizeable, regionally concentrated, and gender-patterned mobility burdens, underscoring the need for education-sensitive prevention, chronic-care management, investment in advanced assistive technology, and distributed community services to achieve Vision 2030 inclusion goals.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Mobility Difficulty (MESH:D014086), Disability (MESH:D009069), Mobility limitation (MESH:D051346)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

64 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12346842/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12346842