Login / Signup

From conversation starters in the front yard to talking to God: the sensory ethnography of communication access.

Betty-Jean M Dee-Price
Published in: Disability and rehabilitation (2020)
With communication being an integral element of rehabilitation, issues of communication access hold implications for both service delivery and research practice across the field of rehabilitation. The contribution of sensory ethnography and its potential use in rehabilitation was also a significant outcome of the study.Implications for rehabilitationCommunication is an important element of rehabilitation but despite the epidemiology of communication disorders among service recipient, it has not received adequate attention from across the field of rehabilitation.This study highlights how environmental factors can greatly shape communication access for many people with significant communication disability.By increasing awareness of communication access, practitioners and researchers of rehabilitation are invited to reflect upon and improve communication corridors; ultimately leading to better health outcomes.The study successfully combines it with the innovations of sensory ethnography with strong potential for development across rehabilitation.In challenging the notion of augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) as belonging to speech pathology, the study contributes to arguments for increased capacity building and interdisciplinary practice across all of rehabilitation.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • mental health
  • multiple sclerosis
  • climate change
  • quality improvement