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Designing Clinical AAC Tablet Applications with Adults who have Mild Intellectual Disabilities

Ryan Colin Gibson, Mark Dunlop, Matt-Mouley Bouamrane, Revathy Nayar

202024 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Patients with mild intellectual disabilities (ID) face significant communication barriers within primary care services. This has a detrimental effect on the quality of treatment being provided, meaning the consultation process could benefit from augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) technologies. However, little research has been conducted in this area beyond that of paper-based aids. We address this by extracting design requirements for a clinical AAC tablet application from n=10 adults with mild ID. Our results show that such technologies can promote communication between general practitioners (GPs) and patients with mild ID by extracting symptoms in advance of the consultation via an accessible questionnaire. These symptoms act as a referent and assist in raising the awareness of conditions commonly overlooked by GPs. Furthermore, the application can support people with ID in identifying and accessing healthcare services. Finally, the participants identified 6 key factors that affect the clarity of medical images.

Topics & Concepts

CLARITYAugmentative and alternative communicationAffect (linguistics)Intellectual disabilityHealth carePsychologyKey (lock)Quality (philosophy)Medical educationComputer scienceApplied psychologyInternet privacyMultimediaMedicinePsychiatryComputer securityEconomicsCommunicationEpistemologyEconomic growthBiochemistryChemistryPhilosophyAssistive Technology in Communication and MobilityAutism Spectrum Disorder ResearchDown syndrome and intellectual disability research
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