Home // SPWID 2015, The First International Conference on Smart Portable, Wearable, Implantable and Disability-oriented Devices and Systems // View article
Authors:
Prangnat Chininthorn
Jan Carel Diehl
Meryl Glaser
William Tucker
Keywords: Deaf patients; low health literacy; community-based co-design; health information sources; mHealth
Abstract:
Many South African Deaf people use South African Sign Language (SASL) for communication, but are less skilled at reading and writing. In the context of healthcare, adult Deaf patients and health professionals therefore face problems with communication. These communication barriers hinder many Deaf people from accessing health information from various sources. Deaf patients need to understand conversations at a health facility, and also to receive accurate and comprehensible health information that supports their understanding of the diagnosed disease for self-management. Health Knowledge Transfer System (HKTS) is a proposed branch from a research and development project on a mobile communication tool (SignSupport) for a Deaf person in healthcare contexts. This paper describes the findings retrieved during the exploration phase regarding the design direction of the HKTS using a community-based co-design (CBCD) approach. Deaf adults and health professionals from Cape Town participated in this research. Health information about Type 2 diabetes as a case study and mobile devices as information transferring tools were selected. The HTKS is envisioned as part of an assistive device for health care system integration to provide information in SASL thus serving the needs of the Deaf patients. It focuses on a scenario in which the targeted diabetic Deaf patients can access health information from anywhere.
Pages: 1 to 6
Copyright: Copyright (c) IARIA, 2015
Publication date: June 21, 2015
Published in: conference
ISSN: 2519-8440
ISBN: 978-1-61208-446-6
Location: Brussels, Belgium
Dates: from June 21, 2015 to June 26, 2016