Institute of Medical Genetics, School of Medicine, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK.
J Eval Clin Pract. 2010 Aug;16(4):811-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2753.2009.01207.x. Epub 2010 Jun 14.
To explore the preferences of deaf people for communication in a hospital consultation.
Design--cross-sectional survey, using a structured, postal questionnaire. Setting--survey of readers of two journals for deaf and hard of hearing people. Participants--999 self-selected individuals with hearing loss in the UK, including those who use sign language and those who use speech. Main outcome measures--preferred mode of communication.
A total of 11% of participants preferred to use sign language within everyday life, 70% used speech and 17% used a mixture of sign and speech. Within a clinic setting, 50% of the sign language users preferred to have a consultation via a sign language interpreter and 43% indicated they would prefer to only have a consultation directly with a signing health professional; 7% would accept a consultation in speech as long as there was good deaf awareness from the health professional, indicated by a knowledge of lip-reading/speech-reading. Of the deaf speech users, 98% preferred to have a consultation in speech and of this group 71% indicated that they would only accept this if the health professional had good deaf awareness. Among the participants who used a mixture of sign language and speech, only 5% said they could cope with a consultation in speech with no deaf awareness whereas 46% were accepting of a spoken consultation as long as it was provided with good deaf awareness; 30% preferred to use an interpreter and 14% preferred to have a consultation directly with a signing health professional.
The hospital communication preferences for most people with deafness could be met by increasing deaf awareness training for health professionals, a greater provision of specialized sign language interpreters and of health professionals who can use fluent sign language directly with clients in areas where contact with deaf people is frequent.
探索聋人在医院就诊中对交流方式的偏好。
设计-横断面调查,使用结构化的邮寄问卷。设置-为聋人和重听人士的两份杂志的读者进行调查。参与者-英国 999 名自我选择的听力损失者,包括使用手语和使用言语的人。主要观察指标-首选的沟通方式。
共有 11%的参与者在日常生活中更喜欢使用手语,70%使用言语,17%使用手语和言语的混合。在诊所环境中,50%的手语使用者希望通过手语翻译进行咨询,43%表示他们希望只与会手语的健康专业人员进行咨询;7%会接受由健康专业人员提供良好的聋人意识(即懂得唇读/读话)的言语咨询。在聋人言语使用者中,98%希望进行言语咨询,其中 71%表示只有当健康专业人员具有良好的聋人意识时才会接受这种咨询。在使用手语和言语混合的参与者中,只有 5%表示他们可以应对没有聋人意识的言语咨询,而 46%接受有良好聋人意识的口语咨询;30%希望使用口译员,14%希望直接与会手语的健康专业人员进行咨询。
通过增加健康专业人员的聋人意识培训、更多提供专业手语翻译以及在与聋人接触频繁的地区提供能够直接与客户使用流利手语的健康专业人员,可以满足大多数聋人在医院沟通方面的需求。