论文标题
“我只是不知所措”:调查残疾人和/或慢性病患者的物理疗法可及性和技术干预措施
"I'm Just Overwhelmed": Investigating Physical Therapy Accessibility and Technology Interventions for People with Disabilities and/or Chronic Conditions
论文作者
论文摘要
许多残疾人和/或慢性病(DA/CC)经历可能需要间歇或正在进行的医疗服务的症状。但是,医疗保健是一个经常被忽视的可访问性工作领域,必须解决与临时和长期残疾相关的访问需求,以增加与医疗保健工人和空间的物理和数字互动的实用性。我们的工作着重于DA/CC:物理疗法(PT)的个人经常使用的特定医疗保健领域。通过一项十二个人访谈研究,我们研究了人们如何访问PT的DA/CC的访问权限,因为社交(例如,物理访问PT诊所)和生理学(例如慢性疼痛)障碍以及技术如何改善PT的访问。由于缺乏交通运输和保险范围不足,我们的参与者通常无法接触PT。因此,我们的许多参与者都依靠在家中管理其DA/CC症状并致力于PT目标。参与者认为,可以使用精心设计的技术来解决PT障碍,例如特别不良的症状或时间不足,可以灵活地适应该人在支持其PT目标的同时,可以灵活地适应该人的动态不断变化的需求。我们介绍核心设计原则(适应性,运动跟踪,社区建设)和紧张局势(保险),以在开发技术以支持PT访问时考虑。从包括社会和生理障碍的镜头重新考虑DA/CC访问PT,这为将可访问性和适应性整合到PT技术中提供了机会。
Many individuals with disabilities and/or chronic conditions (da/cc) experience symptoms that may require intermittent or on-going medical care. However, healthcare is an often-overlooked domain for accessibility work, where access needs associated with temporary and long-term disability must be addressed to increase the utility of physical and digital interactions with healthcare workers and spaces. Our work focuses on a specific domain of healthcare often used by individuals with da/cc: physical therapy (PT). Through a twelve-person interview study, we examined how people's access to PT for their da/cc is hampered by social (e.g., physically visiting a PT clinic) and physiological (e.g., chronic pain) barriers, and how technology could improve PT access. In-person PT is often inaccessible to our participants due to lack of transportation and insufficient insurance coverage. As such, many of our participants relied on at-home PT to manage their da/cc symptoms and work towards PT goals. Participants felt that PT barriers, such as having particularly bad symptoms or feeling short on time, could be addressed with well-designed technology that flexibly adapts to the person's dynamically changing needs while supporting their PT goals. We introduce core design principles (adaptability, movement tracking, community building) and tensions (insurance) to consider when developing technology to support PT access. Rethinking da/cc access to PT from a lens that includes social and physiological barriers presents opportunities to integrate accessibility and adaptability into PT technology.