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为海龟而渴:塑料吸管禁令、吞咽障碍者与可持续发展目标14“水下生物”

Going thirsty for the turtles: Plastic straw bans, people with swallowing disability, and Sustainable Development Goal 14, Life Below Water.

作者信息

Hemsley Bronwyn, Darcy Simon, Given Fiona, Murray Brad R, Balandin Susan

机构信息

The University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, Australia.

The University of Newcastle, Newcastle, Australia and.

出版信息

Int J Speech Lang Pathol. 2023 Feb;25(1):15-19. doi: 10.1080/17549507.2022.2127900. Epub 2022 Dec 12.

Abstract

PURPOSE

This paper relates to the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) Life Below Water (SDG 14) and the need to consider Better Health and Well-Being (SDG 3) in interventions designed to reduce plastic straw waste. The aim of this paper is to explore the competing demands of saving the world's oceans and sea life from plastic straw waste, and simultaneously meeting the health and social needs of people with swallowing or physical disability who use plastic straws for drinking.

RESULT

In order to meet both SDG 14 and not compromise SDG 3 there is a need for collaborative and interdisciplinary, person-centred, inclusive innovation approaches to finding suitable and acceptable alternatives to plastic straws. Many people with swallowing disability will need a durable, flexible, and single-use straw that is resilient enough to withstand jaw closure without breaking. Co-design considerations include the alternative straw being (a) soft and flexible so as not to damage the teeth of people who bite to stabilise the jaw or who have a bite reflex; (b) suitable for both hot and cold drinks; (c) flexible for angling to the mouth; (d) readily, thoroughly and easily cleaned to a high standard of hygiene; (e) widely available for low or no cost wherever drinks are served; and (f) safe for people to use while reducing impact on the environment and being sustainable.

CONCLUSION

Plastic straws are an assistive technology critical for the social inclusion of people with disability. In an inclusive society, reaching a policy position on the provision of plastic straws must include seeking out and listening to the voices of people with sensory, intellectual, physical, or multiple disabilities who use plastic straws.

摘要

目的

本文涉及可持续发展目标(SDG)中的水下生物(SDG 14),以及在旨在减少塑料吸管浪费的干预措施中考虑增进健康和福祉(SDG 3)的必要性。本文的目的是探讨在拯救世界海洋和海洋生物免受塑料吸管浪费的同时,满足吞咽或身体残疾者使用塑料吸管饮水的健康和社会需求这两种相互竞争的需求。

结果

为了实现SDG 14且不影响SDG 3,需要采用协作性、跨学科、以个人为中心的包容性创新方法,以找到合适且可接受的塑料吸管替代品。许多吞咽残疾者需要一种耐用、灵活且一次性使用的吸管,其韧性足以承受颌骨闭合而不折断。共同设计的考虑因素包括替代吸管要(a)柔软且灵活,以免损坏为稳定颌骨而咬吸管或有咬反射的人的牙齿;(b)适用于冷热饮品;(c)可灵活弯曲以对准嘴巴;(d)易于、彻底且方便地清洁至高标准卫生;(e)在提供饮品的任何地方都能以低成本或免费广泛获取;(f)对人们使用安全,同时减少对环境的影响且具有可持续性。

结论

塑料吸管是一项对残疾人士社会融入至关重要的辅助技术。在一个包容性社会中,就提供塑料吸管达成政策立场必须包括寻找并倾听使用塑料吸管的感官、智力、身体或多重残疾人士的声音。

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