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It is time for a national strategy on equitable access to assistive technology in Canada

Rosalie H. Wang, Michael G. Wilson

2022Healthcare Management Forum14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The time has come to develop and implement a Canadian strategy on equitable access to Assistive Technology (AT). AT use has significant health, social, and economic benefits for people with disabilities and older people, and benefits society by assisting to mitigate the most prominent health and social challenges of our time. Our research with citizens (with/without experiences of disabilities or AT use) and system leaders across Canada determined that access is variable and inequitable, with unmet needs, restricted funding, and inefficiencies. Collaboratively, we devised a blueprint, comprising a policy vision, three priority issues to address, principles to underpin policy actions, and short- and long-term priorities, from which to build a strategy. We hope the blueprint sparks action among citizens and health leaders, especially those working across governments, sectors, and communities to promote leadership and create a cross-jurisdictional coalition to elaborate on a national strategy and action plans for moving forward.

Topics & Concepts

BlueprintAction (physics)Public relationsBusinessPolitical scienceEconomic growthEconomicsEngineeringPhysicsMechanical engineeringQuantum mechanicsAssistive Technology in Communication and MobilityCerebral Palsy and Movement DisordersHealthcare innovation and challenges
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