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Inequalities in access to healthcare faced by women who are deaf


J Ubido, J Huntington, D Warburton - Health and Social Care in …, 2002 - interscience.wiley.com
2 Typetalk is a national organization that is based in Liverpool. Deaf people with access to a
minicom, on which phone messages can be typed, can phone Typetalk, and tell the operator
who they want to phone and what they want to say. The Typetalk operator will then make ...
Cited by 35 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 4 versions

Health care delivery and deaf people: practice, problems, and recommendations …

- oxfordjournals.org [PDF] 
L Harmer - Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 1999 - Oxford Univ Press
& Anton-Culver, 1988). The doctor-patient relation- ship is often viewed as the cornerstone of
health care delivery (Epstein, Campbell, Cohen-Cole, McWhin- ney, & Smilkstein, 1993; Stoeckle
& Billings, 1987). Studies have shown that effective communication be- tween a patient ...
Cited by 27 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 5 versions

Health care utilization and adults who are deaf: Relationship with age at onset of …


S Barnett, P Franks - Health Services Research, 2002 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
Address correspondence to Steven Barnett, MD, Clinical Senior Instructor, Family Medicine
Center, 885 South Avenue, Rochester, NY 14620. Peter Franks, MD, is a Professor at the Primary
Care Institute, Highland Hospital and Department of Family Medicine, University of ...
Cited by 25 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 5 versions

How Many People Use ASL in the United States?

- jhu.edu [PDF] 
R Mitchell, T Young, B Bachleda, M Karchmer - Sign Language Studies, 2006 - muse.jhu.edu
In the United States, home language use surveys are now commonplace. The decennial census
has included inquiries about home language use within immigrant households since 1890 and
within all US homes since 1970 (see US Census Bureau 2002a, hereafter cited as ...
Cited by 14 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 9 versions

Deaf persons and computer use

- jhu.edu [PDF] 
P Zazove, HE Meador, HA Derry, DW Gorenflo, … - American Annals of the …, 2004 - muse.jhu.edu
Abstract Deaf persons' computer use was studied (N = 227). Respondents self-administered
a survey in their preferred language (voice, American Sign Language, captions, or printed
English). A small nonparticipant sample was also recruited. Demographics were ...
Cited by 10 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 6 versions

8. INCLUSION OF DISABLED POPULATIONS IN INTERVIEW SURVEYS: REVIEW …


JA Parsons, S Baum, TP Johnson, G … - Exploring theories and …, 2001 - emeraldinsight.com
This paper is the result of a comprehensive study of the issues and challenges of including persons
with disabilities in interview surveys. Through a review of the literature and over fifty in-depth
interviews with key disability advocates and survey methodologists, we discuss the major ...
Cited by 2 - Related articles - All 3 versions

ASSESSING THE END-OF-LIFE-CARE EDUCATIONAL NEEDS OF ELDERLY …


B Allen, N Meyers - Focus on Nonverbal Communication Research, 2007 - books.google.com
In: Focus on Nonverbal Communication Research ISBN 1-59454-790-4 Editor. Finley R.
Lewis, pp. 125-147© 2007 Nova Science Publishers, Inc. Chapter 6 ASSESSING THE
END-OF-LIFE-CARE EDUCATIONAL NEEDS OF ELDERLY DEAF PERSONS: LESSONS ...
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[DOC] Survey Research Laboratory


JA Parsons, S Baum, TP Johnson - srl.uic.edu
It is estimated that approximately one-fifth of the non-institutionalized population of the United
States (about 49 million persons) have some form of physical or developmental disability
(LaPlante, 1996). Of these, approximately 38 million are estimated to have an activity ...
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[PDF] Healthcare and the Deaf


WC Cameron - rwpc.org
Imagine for a moment that you are being poked and prodded at, and not being told why. Would
you accept, or tolerate that kind of treatment? Would it matter to you if that person poking or prodding
at you was a healthcare provider? Likely, your answer would be no. But that is what many ...
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