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Accessibility for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing. City of Pittsburgh/Allegheny County Task Force on Disabilities. Our Goal. Improve access to the local Hospitals to greater accommodate the Deaf and Hard of Hearing community. Improve access to assistive technology
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Accessibility for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing City of Pittsburgh/Allegheny County Task Force on Disabilities
Our Goal • Improve access to the local Hospitals to greater accommodate the Deaf and Hard of Hearing community. • Improve access to assistive technology • Improve communications between staff and patients • Ensure the Americans with Disabilities Act is being considered and followed • Raise awareness to hospital procedures • Raise awareness of deaf needs in hospital settings
Provide services and programs in the most integrated setting appropriate Make reasonable modifications in policies and procedures to avoid discrimination on the basis of disability, unless it would result in a fundamental alteration in the program or activity Ensure buildings are accessible Provide auxiliary aid to individuals with disabilities, at no additional cost, where necessary to ensure effective communication for individuals with hearing, vision or speech impairments Your Rights Section 504 and the ADA
Communication • Under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), hospitals must provide effective means of communication for patients, family members, and hospital visitors who are deaf or hard of hearing. • Notes, TTY/TDD’s, Interpreters, Amplified Telephones, closed captions are some of the possible accommodations for the deaf and hard of hearing
Our Process Complaints regarding access come to the Task Force on Disabilities Decision to survey the local hospitals Supplemental consumer survey for comparisons Analysis and comparisons for data to decide what needs to be done Education for the hospitals and consumers via the Task Force and advocacy groups
Consumer Survey • Results from the General Question Section Most people rated their hospital visit as fair or good. The majority of people rated communication with staff as fair. Most consumers rated the hospitals willingness to fulfill requests as fair.
Consumer Survey cont. • Results for the Equal treatment section of the questionnaire.
Consumer Survey cont. • Results for the Accommodations section • About 90% of the time hospitals provided a TTY/TDD on request • Video relay equipment not offered • Certified interpreter was provided 60% of the time with a request, 29% of the time without a request • Emergency alarm flashers provided the majority of time without a request
Your Suggestions • Have better access to TTY/TDD’s • Written communication is often an insufficient means of communication • Need to get interpreters • Education needed about deaf culture • Speak face to face to aid in lip reading • Staff needs to be educated on how to use the assistive technology • Doctors and nurses should have some training with ASL
Your Comments “Doctors, nurses and support staff need to be aware that there is a different culture within the deaf and hard of hearing communities.” “Without my glasses on I can’t see well, so if I say to a doctor or a nurse, I’m deaf and need my glasses to read your lips- don’t scream in my face- it won’t make me hear any better!” “They write to me- too many words, too little, hard to understand. Had them call my therapist-she explained why I needed and interpreter and TTY.”
Next Steps • Education • Educate both groups on how the different groups are run and their procedures • Awareness • Bring awareness about equal health care for everyone with a disability • Advocacy • Begin a movement to ensure equal care for everyone at every facility
City of Pittsburgh/Allegheny Task Force on Disabilities Department of City Planning- Noor Ismail, Richard Meritzer Participating Hospitals Consumer Participants Mayor Luke Ravenstahl Chris Noschese Kim Mathos Danielle Lengle Christina Chamberlain Jennifer Macioce Mary Alice Olsen Teresa Nellans Susan Shaffer Consumer Health Coalition Irv Freeman Tanya Ulrich Special Thanks to: