Publication | Open Access
Chronically Under-Addressed: Considerations for HCI Accessibility Practice with Chronically Ill People
51
Citations
82
References
2022
Year
Unknown Venue
Chronically Ill PeopleChronic IllnessesDisabilityEducationHci Accessibility PracticeAccessible DesignDigital InterventionPrimary CareConnected HealthComputer AccessibilityDisability StudyWeb AccessibilityChronic IllnessAssistive TechnologyHealth PolicyEhealthUser ExperienceRehabilitationMobile AccessibilityHealth Information TechnologyNursingOccupational TherapyHuman-computer InteractionMedicine
Accessible design and technology could support the large and growing group of people with chronic illnesses. However, human computer interactions (HCI) has largely approached people with chronic illnesses through a lens of medical tracking or treatment rather than accessibility. We describe and demonstrate a framework for designing technology in ways that center the chronically ill experience. First, we identify guiding tenets: 1) treating chronically ill people not as patients but as people with access needs and expertise, 2) recognizing the way that variable ability shapes accessibility considerations, and 3) adopting a theoretical understanding of chronic illness that attends to the body. We then illustrate these tenets through autoethnographic case studies of two chronically ill authors using technology. Finally, we discuss implications for technology design, including designing for consequence-based accessibility, considering how to engage care communities, and how HCI research can engage chronically ill participants in research.
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