Smartphone accessibility: understanding the lived experience of users with cervical spinal cord injuries.
Richard Armstrong-WoodChrysovalanto MessiouAmber KiteElisabeth JoyceStephanie PanousisHannah CampbellArnaud LauriauJulia B ManningTom CarlsonPublished in: Disability and rehabilitation. Assistive technology (2023)
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 RehabilitationA 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.