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- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!auvm!ECSVAX.BITNET!DMIMI
- Message-ID: <9210071155.AA00994@ecsvax.uncecs.edu>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.deaf-l
- Date: Wed, 7 Oct 1992 07:55:38 -0400
- Sender: DEAF LIST <DEAF-L@SIUCVMB.BITNET>
- From: Miriam Clifford <DMIMI@ECSVAX.BITNET>
- Subject: RE:Handicap Digest # 2949
- Lines: 29
-
- In regard to meeting the deaf person's needs in a mental health setting.
-
- With ADA in force, mental health clinics, hospitals, etc., have a clear
- responsibility to meet needs with an interpreter or whatever is necessary.
-
- However, few have made provision for this. I've looked into the situation
- in North Carolina (of course, this is a state responsiblity usually), to
- find that there are very few situations in the State where a deaf or hard
- of hearing person can get mental health help that is appropriate for them.
-
- There is one residential unit in one mental hospital that has an interpreter
- present at least part of the time. What happens to anyone else with such
- needs I don't know. I could get side-tracked here with a question of
- what happens to an older person who is either misdiagnosed as mentally
- incompetent when he/she is deaf or hard of hearing, or who has both
- conditions. But, let me not digress.
-
- When the mental health facility's staff was asked how many deaf/hoh people
- they served, they said "none". To which I replied, why should anyone come
- to you when you can't provide service to them? "Oh" they said.
-
- Now, in North Carolina, the state Division of Mental Health and the State
- Division for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing are collaborating to provide a
- variety of services for us. Which requires that deaf and hard of hearing
- people remain active in demanding such services, whether that behavior is
- popular or not.
-
- dmimi@ecsvax.uncecs.edu dmimi@ecsvax.bitnet
- Miriam (Mimi) Clifford; 2535 Sevier St, Durham, NC 27705; 919-489-4821
-