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Women with Disabilities: Barriers and Facilitators to Accessing ...

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WOMEN WITH DISABILITIES: BARRIERS AND FACILITATORS TO ACCESSING SERVICES DURING PREGNANCY,CHILDBIRTH AND EARLY MOTHERHOODSchool of Nursing <strong>and</strong> Midwifery, Trinity College Dublindarkened room the woman cannot focus on the educa<strong>to</strong>r’s lips, so lip-reading isimpossible. The use of videos <strong>with</strong> no subtitles is inappropriate <strong>and</strong> theprovision of leaflets may be inappropriate due <strong>to</strong> the difficulty some women mayhave <strong>with</strong> comprehension (Kelsall, 1992). Background noise <strong>and</strong> chatter can beirritating <strong>and</strong> distracting <strong>and</strong> a woman may find it difficult <strong>to</strong> concentrate on lipreading.If strategies such as group discussions are used, women <strong>with</strong> ahearing impairment may feel excluded <strong>and</strong> may choose not <strong>to</strong> participate in thediscussion because of their inability <strong>to</strong> lip-read other women in the audience,their own limited diction or simply because they do not underst<strong>and</strong> what is beingdiscussed. This isolates <strong>and</strong> marginalises women <strong>with</strong> hearing impairment evenfurther.4.6.2. Ineffective communication between health professionals <strong>and</strong>women <strong>with</strong> hearing impairment4.6.2.1. IntroductionEffective communication is a fundamental challenge for women <strong>with</strong> disabilitiesespecially those <strong>with</strong> a hearing impairment (Clark, 2002; Royal National Institutefor the Deaf (RNID), 2004; NDA, 2007). Deaf women can encounter enormouschallenges <strong>and</strong> discrimina<strong>to</strong>ry practices when accessing health care (Iezzoni etal, 2004; Steinberg, 2006) but linguistic challenge is the most significant onerequiring redress (Harris <strong>and</strong> Bamford, 2001). It is estimated that 50% ofwomen <strong>with</strong> hearing impairment experience difficulty when communicating <strong>with</strong>health professionals (Ubido et al, 2002). Communicational <strong>and</strong> linguisticdifficulties can occur both at a personal level, as women interface <strong>with</strong> healthprofessionals, <strong>and</strong> at an institutional level (Steinberg, 2006). Iezzoni et al (2004)found that health professionals fail <strong>to</strong> comprehend the uniqueness of the deafculture <strong>and</strong> its associated linguistic identity. These challenges have the potential<strong>to</strong> exclude <strong>and</strong> marginalise women who are deaf from society.A lack of awareness <strong>and</strong> knowledge amongst health professionals of how <strong>to</strong>approach <strong>and</strong> communicate <strong>with</strong> deaf women manifests itself as a generalunwillingness <strong>to</strong> communicate. Although it is deemed an important component79

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