India, July 13 -- For a child, disability is often understood in simple but heart-breaking terms: difference, loneliness, exclusion. Playtime is hardest. Adults who grew up differently abled still speak with pain of sitting to one side as games, quarrels and friendships unfolded around them. It's why Amy Jandrisevits's dolls mean so much to their little recipients, and their parents. Jandrisevits makes customised dolls that look just like the child they are meant for. More importantly, they mirror that specific child's differences. Some are missing hands or limbs; others have vitiligo or large birthmarks; still others come with a walker, wheelchair, feeding tube or oxygen cylinder. Keagan Cameron is eight and his 18-inch doll, Chip, is like...