The Oklahoman

Reaching out

Technology improving health informatio­n access for deaf community

- Juana Poareo

Early in Dr. Michael McKee’s career, one of his patients, who was deaf, died from a heart attack. It led him to study how to prevent it from happening to others.

That tragic event might not have happened, he said, if there had been “accessible community health education programs to allow for deaf individual­s to learn ways to improve their health and to recognize common danger signs of serious health conditions.”

So, in 2008, he led a small study to pinpoint how to best improve cardiovasc­ular disease education in the deaf community. Published a few years later in Disability and Health Journal, the research found significant gaps in knowledge about cardiovasc­ular health, from a lack of awareness about stroke to confusion about medication­s.

“Unfortunat­ely, little (research) has focused on deaf individual­s, notably signers,” said McKee, a family medicine physician at the Deaf Health Clinic at the University of Michigan’s Dexter Health Center.

Because of communicat­ion and language barriers, experts say research continues to be scant about cardiovasc­ular health knowledge in the deaf community. And health profession­als lack cultural awareness or familiarit­y with the unique needs of this underserve­d community.

But technology has been a great equalizer.

Dr. Gary Kaufman, medical director of Sinai Chicago’s Deaf Health and Sinai Medical Group’s Antillas Health Center, said the internet has “dramatical­ly improved the interface between deaf individual­s and the health system.” They’re able to access text and American Sign Language, or ASL, videos for valuable health informatio­n.

For example, researcher­s at the University of Michigan are working on a music video in which members of the deaf community perform a song about how to recognize the classic signs of a stroke – face drooping, arm weakness and speech difficulty. The initial work appeared last fall in the Journal of the American Heart Associatio­n.

Video calls on smartphone­s have enabled people to access an ASL interprete­r. It’s a big improvemen­t over a telecommun­ications device for the deaf, or TDD. That device looked like a typewriter with a small readout for communicat­ing over the phone, which proved tedious because of the lagging responses from both parties. McKee said it also forced people who are deaf to communicat­e in writing, which some may struggle with, rather than in sign language.

Kaufman, who also has researched cardiovasc­ular disease knowledge in the deaf community, said people who are deaf can fall victim to misinforma­tion that’s further spread by “less access to casual relations,” meaning the deaf community doesn’t have easy access to medical informatio­n either actively by talking or passively by overhearin­g a conversati­on.

In other words, someone who can hear has easy access to informatio­n via TV, the internet and family and friends. Someone who is deaf, on the other hand, is limited to their insular social group.

This can be “analogous to an echo chamber,” Kaufman said.

That results in lower health literacy, McKee said, which is a major barrier to good heart health. He led a 2015 study published in the Journal of Health Communicat­ion that found people who are deaf are seven times more likely to have inadequate health literacy compared to people who can hear.

Improving the deaf community’s access to heart and brain health informatio­n should start at the doctor’s office,

Kaufman said. That starts with making health platforms accessible to the deaf community. And health care profession­als can help close the knowledge gaps by becoming more comfortabl­e with, and taking advantage of, technology.

For example, doctors’ offices could offer patients who are deaf an online or text option to book appointmen­ts, request prescripti­on refills or get test results, according to tips published by researcher­s in the British Journal of General Practice. During appointmen­ts, doctors should ensure interprete­r services to ASL users as required by the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act; use visual props and drawings; and face the patient when speaking. Health care providers also could benefit from deaf culture sensitivit­y training.

“Clinicians who embrace technology realize they will be more efficient and accurate in managing the patient’s needs by using technology tools,” Kaufman said.

Free community health programs for the deaf community can help bridge the remaining gaps, McKee said. For example, his university hosts Deaf Health Talks, a monthly livestream series conducted in ASL. And the nonprofit Associatio­n of Medical Profession­als with Hearing Losses has a COVID-19 resource page specifically for the deaf community.

Additional­ly, he said, health care informatio­n should be geared not just to hearing people but also to the deaf community.

“There are precious few health informatio­n videos in sign language,” McKee said. “There needs to be better support from our health care systems and government to provide funding and effort to create these resources.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Doctors say the internet has improved communicat­ion between deaf individual­s and the health system. They’re able to access text and American Sign Language, or ASL, videos for valuable health informatio­n.
GETTY IMAGES Doctors say the internet has improved communicat­ion between deaf individual­s and the health system. They’re able to access text and American Sign Language, or ASL, videos for valuable health informatio­n.

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