From News Nation:
“Balky
sign-ups complicate virus vaccinations for blind, deaf”
Unable to see,
Carla McQuillan typically uses a program that converts the letters on a screen
into audible words when she wants to read something online. The tool wouldn’t
work when she tried to schedule an appointment to get a COVID-19 vaccine,
however. “When I clicked, it wouldn’t tell me what the date was. I could have
tapped on something, but I wouldn’t have known what it was,” said McQuillan,
who operates a Montessori school and serves as president of the National
Federation of the Blind of Oregon. Her husband, who can see, eventually helped
out.
In Alabama,
Donte Little helped 20 blind and deaf people who had trouble signing up for
vaccinations and getting to a clinic for shots. “It’s been a challenge for
anybody. Add deafness or blindness on top of it and it’s that much more of
one,” said Little, who is visually impaired and directs a regional center for
the Alabama Institute for Deaf and Blind. The confusing maze of websites, phone
numbers, emails and paper documents required to sign up for immunization in the
United States is presenting a challenge for people who are visually impaired or
hard of hearing. Providers are using multiple different systems that can vary
by state and even cities, they say, often forcing the disabled to rely on
others to help them get in line.
Federal laws
require communications in an understandable format and accommodations to assist
people who might face obstacles, and the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention has laid out instructions that include having local health
departments provide staff to address accessibility needs and plans. But the
National Federation of the Blind wrote to every U.S. governor last month
complaining about hurdles posed by balky sign-up systems and vaccine
distribution methods including drive-up clinics, which it said are largely
inaccessible to people who can’t see. The group has yet to receive a
“substantive” response from any state, spokesman Chris Danielsen said. Separately,
the National Association of the Deaf said problems including confusing and
complex information, phone systems that can’t be used by hard of hearing and a
lack of interpreters is making it difficult for people who can’t hear to make
appointments for immunizations. Chief Executive Howard A. Rosenblum said the
group has asked the Biden administration for help. “The process continues to be
very haphazard and confusing for everyone, but particularly for people with
disabilities due to the lack of foresight on accessibility,” he said in an
email.
Such
problems could affect millions. The CDC reports that an estimated 12
million Americans over the age of 40 have impaired vision, including 1 million
who are blind, and the National Association of the Deaf said a 2011 study found
that 48 million Americans are deaf or hard of hearing. The National Consortium
on Deaf-Blindness estimated in 2008 that about 40,000 U.S. adults were both
deaf and blind. Tara L. Invidiato, a director with the American
Association of the DeafBlind, said members trying to sign up for vaccines have
faced multiple problems including glitchy websites, inaccessible notifications
and the speed required to fill out forms while reading Braille. “I had
to rely on someone who can see and that is unsettling because we the DeafBlind
aim for independent living and we know we can do things by ourselves for the most
part,” she said in an email interview. Robert Weinstock, who is
profoundly deaf, said clunky telephone systems are posing problems for some who
can’t hear because some appointment hotlines don’t have workers who understand
how to use video services that allow for communication by sign language. That
leads to frustration and calls that end with hang-ups, he said. “Also,
some sites will accept pre-registration online, but conduct the actual
scheduling via telephone, leaving voice messages even when the deaf person has
explicitly requested contact via text or email. This can be a significant
barrier,” said Weinstock, director of public relations at Gallaudet University,
a school for the deaf.
Alicia Wooten,
who works with a COVID-19 team at Gallaudet, which is in Washington, D.C., said
simply getting the word out to deaf people about vaccination availability is a
problem because so much notification is done by platforms including radio. “This
means the Deaf community has a delay in getting information, so that by the
time they try to register, vaccines are already reserved. The cycle is then
repeated,” she said in an email. But there are cases where the system is
working. Weinstock said both he and his wife went to vaccination locations and
got shots with relative ease because there were interpreters and people had
been trained. “Every single person I spoke with, from check-in to
‘recovery,’ whipped out their smartphones and used a notes app to converse with
me, or wrote on paper, or otherwise made sure I was fully included,” Weinstock,
who lives in Maryland, said in an email exchange.
Robert Jaquiss,
who is blind, experienced problems firsthand when he tried to get an
appointment for a shot in Missoula, Montana. He was eventually able to snag a
time with the help of a friend who can see, but Jaquiss said the sign-up system
isn’t built to accommodate people unable to navigate quickly during the
process. “I can’t just zip-zip through,” Jaquiss, 67, said in a phone
interview. “When they say a site link opens up at 1 p.m., they mean 1 p.m., and
if you’re not Johnny on the spot the appointments are gone.”
^ Throughout the
Pandemic you have heard and seen the major issues that the disabled (the blind,
deaf, those in wheelchairs, those with Autism, etc.) have been forced to fight
through with little help from Local, State or Federal Governments. Now those
hardships extend to making the appointment for the Covid Vaccine. The Pandemic
has been hard on everyone, but even more so with the constant added struggles
and restrictions on the disabled. There really needs to be much more done on
every level to include the blind, the deaf and everyone else who is disabled
and that help should not wait until Covid is gone. It needs to happen NOW! ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/us-news/balky-sign-ups-complicate-virus-vaccinations-for-blind-deaf/
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