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Smartphone accessibility: understanding the lived experience of users with cervical spinal cord injuries

To explore accessibility challenges encountered by smartphone users with cervical spinal cord injuries (C1-C8).To investigate the suitability of current technology and make recommendations to help future technology meet user needs. The study uses a mixed-method approach combining an inductive themat...

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Published in:Disability and rehabilitation: Assistive technology 2024-05, Vol.ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print), p.1-12
Main Authors: Armstrong-Wood, Richard, Messiou, Chrysovalanto, Kite, Amber, Joyce, Elisabeth, Panousis, Stephanie, Campbell, Hannah, Lauriau, Arnaud, Manning, Julia, Carlson, Tom
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creator Armstrong-Wood, Richard
Messiou, Chrysovalanto
Kite, Amber
Joyce, Elisabeth
Panousis, Stephanie
Campbell, Hannah
Lauriau, Arnaud
Manning, Julia
Carlson, Tom
description To explore accessibility challenges encountered by smartphone users with cervical spinal cord injuries (C1-C8).To investigate the suitability of current technology and make recommendations to help future technology meet user needs. The study uses a mixed-method approach combining an inductive thematic analysis of nine semi-structured interviews with a quantitative analysis of thirty-nine questionnaires. The analysis generated four themes: 'the drive for independence and self-efficacy'; 'trying to make it work'; 'getting the right technology for me'; 'using the phone as and when I want to'. These themes highlighted how unresolved access issues and situational barriers limited independence and created unwanted privacy compromises for effective communication. There was a lack of information or support on available smartphone accessibility features and assistive technology (AT). Smartphone AT was regarded as overpriced, poorly designed and lacking the voices of people with disabilities. The smartphone's potential to improve quality of life, participation, and well-being is limited by accessibility challenges hindering independent and private smartphone use. Future design work should focus on improving accessibility, investigating reasons for AT's poor quality and high cost, and removing barriers to end-user inclusion. To enhance user awareness of available technology, stakeholders should build and maintain an open platform to act as an information source for peer and professional support on assistive technology. Implications for Rehabilitation A smartphone's potential to empower, connect, and improve the quality of life of people with a cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) is limited by unresolved accessibility barriers, causing isolation. Standard interaction methods used by people with a cervical SCI to mitigate smartphone access barriers can require unwanted privacy compromises and limit independence. Participants struggled to find information and support on available accessibility solutions and assistive technologies that might enable easier smartphone use. Participants rarely used assistive technology (AT) to facilitate smartphone use, and available AT was regarded as expensive and poorly designed.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/17483107.2023.2192246
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The study uses a mixed-method approach combining an inductive thematic analysis of nine semi-structured interviews with a quantitative analysis of thirty-nine questionnaires. The analysis generated four themes: 'the drive for independence and self-efficacy'; 'trying to make it work'; 'getting the right technology for me'; 'using the phone as and when I want to'. These themes highlighted how unresolved access issues and situational barriers limited independence and created unwanted privacy compromises for effective communication. There was a lack of information or support on available smartphone accessibility features and assistive technology (AT). Smartphone AT was regarded as overpriced, poorly designed and lacking the voices of people with disabilities. The smartphone's potential to improve quality of life, participation, and well-being is limited by accessibility challenges hindering independent and private smartphone use. Future design work should focus on improving accessibility, investigating reasons for AT's poor quality and high cost, and removing barriers to end-user inclusion. To enhance user awareness of available technology, stakeholders should build and maintain an open platform to act as an information source for peer and professional support on assistive technology. Implications for Rehabilitation A smartphone's potential to empower, connect, and improve the quality of life of people with a cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) is limited by unresolved accessibility barriers, causing isolation. Standard interaction methods used by people with a cervical SCI to mitigate smartphone access barriers can require unwanted privacy compromises and limit independence. Participants struggled to find information and support on available accessibility solutions and assistive technologies that might enable easier smartphone use. 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Future design work should focus on improving accessibility, investigating reasons for AT's poor quality and high cost, and removing barriers to end-user inclusion. To enhance user awareness of available technology, stakeholders should build and maintain an open platform to act as an information source for peer and professional support on assistive technology. Implications for Rehabilitation A smartphone's potential to empower, connect, and improve the quality of life of people with a cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) is limited by unresolved accessibility barriers, causing isolation. Standard interaction methods used by people with a cervical SCI to mitigate smartphone access barriers can require unwanted privacy compromises and limit independence. Participants struggled to find information and support on available accessibility solutions and assistive technologies that might enable easier smartphone use. 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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Taylor and Francis:Jisc Collections:Taylor and Francis Read and Publish Agreement 2024-2025:Medical Collection (Reading list)
subjects Access
accessibility
Adaptive technology
Adult
Aged
assistive technology
Cervical Cord - injuries
Cervical spinal cord injuries
Disabled Persons - psychology
Disabled Persons - rehabilitation
Female
Handicapped accessibility
Handicapped assistance devices
Humans
Information technology
Injuries
Interviews as Topic
Male
Middle Aged
mixed methods
People with disabilities
Privacy
Qualitative Research
Quality of Life
Quantitative analysis
Self Efficacy
Self-Help Devices
Smartphone
Smartphones
Spinal cord
Spinal cord injuries
Spinal Cord Injuries - psychology
Spinal Cord Injuries - rehabilitation
Spinal cord injury
Suitability
Surveys and Questionnaires
thematic analysis
usability
title Smartphone accessibility: understanding the lived experience of users with cervical spinal cord injuries
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