School of Optometry, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada
Institut Nazareth et Louis-Braille du Centre Intégré de Santé et de Services Sociaux de la Montérégie-Centre, Longueuil, Québec, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2021 Jan 25;11(1):e044873. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-044873.
Abandonment of vision, hearing or mobility aids suggests common barriers and facilitators to ongoing device use. However, the possible interactive effects of combined hearing and vision disabilities on device use by those living with deafblindness are unclear. Here we summarise existing knowledge on variables influencing assistive technology use from the perspective of persons living with deafblindness. We used the WHO's International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) framework to contextualise the findings, asking 'What is currently known about variables influencing the (non-)use of assistive devices recommended for persons with deafblindness?'
A scoping review followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews Checklist.
PubMed; ProQuest: ERIC; ProQuest Dissertation; ProQuest: Sociological Thesaurus; Web of Science; Scientific Electronic Library Online; Bielefeld Academic Search Engine; Pascal & Francis; APA PsycINFO and Ebsco for CINAHL were searched through 9 November 2020.
We included peer-reviewed studies that reported on assistive technology, device abandonment/utilisation and provided data from persons living with deafblindness.
Four team members independently scored 83 studies for eligibility.
Ten articles were chosen for data extraction. The emerging variables replicated established categories of barriers and facilitators: personal, device-related, environmental and intervention variables. The use of the ICF highlighted how an intermediate variable (eg, device acceptability) was necessary in order for a variable to become a barrier or a facilitator to device use.
The variables influencing device use by persons with deafblindness followed the same categories described for single impairments. Usability was challenged in devices that rely on the 'other' sense. Haptic and tactile aids are rarely studied. The limited available information and the dire need for assistive technologies for people with deafblindness emphasises the urgency of research and technology development for this marginalised population.
放弃视力、听力或行动辅助工具表明了持续使用设备的常见障碍和促进因素。然而,对于那些患有聋盲的人来说,听力和视力残疾的综合影响对设备使用的可能交互作用尚不清楚。在这里,我们从聋盲人的角度总结了影响辅助技术使用的变量的现有知识。我们使用世界卫生组织的国际功能、残疾和健康分类(ICF)框架来使这些发现具有背景意义,即“目前已知哪些变量会影响推荐给聋盲人使用的辅助设备的(不)使用?”
本研究遵循了系统评价和荟萃分析扩展的首选报告项目(PRISMA-ScR)清单进行了范围综述。
PubMed;ProQuest:ERIC;ProQuest 论文;ProQuest:社会学词库;Web of Science;Scientific Electronic Library Online;Bielefeld Academic Search Engine;Pascal & Francis;APA PsycINFO 和 Ebsco for CINAHL 于 2020 年 11 月 9 日进行了搜索。
我们纳入了报告辅助技术、设备废弃/使用情况并提供了聋盲人数据的同行评审研究。
四名团队成员独立对 83 项研究进行了资格评分。
选择了 10 篇文章进行数据提取。新兴变量复制了已确立的障碍和促进因素类别:个人、设备相关、环境和干预变量。对 ICF 的使用强调了中间变量(例如,设备可接受性)对于将变量转化为设备使用的障碍或促进因素是必要的。
影响聋盲人设备使用的变量遵循与单一障碍相同的类别描述。在依赖“另一种”感官的设备中,可用性受到挑战。触觉和触觉辅助工具很少被研究。对于聋盲人来说,可用的信息有限,对辅助技术的迫切需求强调了对这一边缘化人群进行研究和技术开发的紧迫性。