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Disability and Health Journal

ISSN: 1936-6574

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Datasets associated with articles published in Disability and Health Journal

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1970
2024
1970 2024
9 results
  • Data for: Ask and ye shall not receive: Interpreter-related access barriers reported by deaf users of American Sign Language
    Database in Excel of complaints made by Deaf users of ASL to the Idaho Council of the Deaf and Hard of Hearing regarding access to communication in health care settings from 2012-2017.
    • Dataset
  • Data for: The Development of a Scale to Assess Interactions of Patients who are Blind with their Healthcare Providers
    I am not sure which licensure applies to these data. These are the deidentified data for the scale developed and tested in the studies reported in this manuscript.
    • Dataset
  • COVID-19 vaccination and people with disabilities
    US residents aged 18+ Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk) workers. Smallest Geographic Unit: United States
    • Dataset
  • COVID-19 vaccination and people with disabilities
    US residents aged 18+ Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk) workers. Smallest Geographic Unit: United States
    • Dataset
  • COVID-19 vaccination and people with disabilities
    US residents aged 18+ Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk) workers. Smallest Geographic Unit: United States
    • Dataset
  • Impacts of COVID-19 on People with Disabilities
    When it comes to planning, meeting accommodation needs, and accessibility issues, people with disabilities are at a disproportionately high risk during times of crisis compared to those without. Additionally, many people with disabilities are immunocompromised and are at a greatest risk of serious complications and death due to infection from COVID-19. This survey was launched in April of 2020 to look further into how people with disabilities have been experiencing the COVID-19 pandemic, how their daily lives have been impacted, and how and where they were accessing information on best practices and early recommendations by various information sources. We were particularly interested in learning about differences among people with disabilities in both urban and rural areas in the United States. To collect this information, we launched a survey on Amazon MTurk, which is a common platform for recruiting participants in hard-to-reach populations within social science and human subjects research. After a brief set of screener questions asking about age, disability status, and checking for bots, the survey questions asked about participants’ health, daily activities, community participation, trust in information sources, pandemic response behaviors, and how those things have been impacted by changes during the COVID-19 pandemic. The results were analyzed using statistical software and used to produce research briefs, factsheets, and peer-reviewed journal articles, and may be incorporated into future presentations, national conferences, and additional publications.
    • Dataset
  • Impacts of COVID-19 on People with Disabilities
    When it comes to planning, meeting accommodation needs, and accessibility issues, people with disabilities are at a disproportionately high risk during times of crisis compared to those without. Additionally, many people with disabilities are immunocompromised and are at a greatest risk of serious complications and death due to infection from COVID-19. This survey was launched in April of 2020 to look further into how people with disabilities have been experiencing the COVID-19 pandemic, how their daily lives have been impacted, and how and where they were accessing information on best practices and early recommendations by various information sources. We were particularly interested in learning about differences among people with disabilities in both urban and rural areas in the United States. To collect this information, we launched a survey on Amazon MTurk, which is a common platform for recruiting participants in hard-to-reach populations within social science and human subjects research. After a brief set of screener questions asking about age, disability status, and checking for bots, the survey questions asked about participants’ health, daily activities, community participation, trust in information sources, pandemic response behaviors, and how those things have been impacted by changes during the COVID-19 pandemic. The results were analyzed using statistical software and used to produce research briefs, factsheets, and peer-reviewed journal articles, and may be incorporated into future presentations, national conferences, and additional publications.
    • Dataset
  • Impacts of COVID-19 on People with Disabilities
    When it comes to planning, meeting accommodation needs, and accessibility issues, people with disabilities are at a disproportionately high risk during times of crisis compared to those without. Additionally, many people with disabilities are immunocompromised and are at a greatest risk of serious complications and death due to infection from COVID-19. This survey was launched in April of 2020 to look further into how people with disabilities have been experiencing the COVID-19 pandemic, how their daily lives have been impacted, and how and where they were accessing information on best practices and early recommendations by various information sources. We were particularly interested in learning about differences among people with disabilities in both urban and rural areas in the United States. To collect this information, we launched a survey on Amazon MTurk, which is a common platform for recruiting participants in hard-to-reach populations within social science and human subjects research. After a brief set of screener questions asking about age, disability status, and checking for bots, the survey questions asked about participants’ health, daily activities, community participation, trust in information sources, pandemic response behaviors, and how those things have been impacted by changes during the COVID-19 pandemic. The results were analyzed using statistical software and used to produce research briefs, factsheets, and peer-reviewed journal articles, and may be incorporated into future presentations, national conferences, and additional publications.
    • Dataset
  • Impacts of COVID-19 on People with Disabilities
    When it comes to planning, meeting accommodation needs, and accessibility issues, people with disabilities are at a disproportionately high risk during times of crisis compared to those without. Additionally, many people with disabilities are immunocompromised and are at a greatest risk of serious complications and death due to infection from COVID-19. This survey was launched in April of 2020 to look further into how people with disabilities have been experiencing the COVID-19 pandemic, how their daily lives have been impacted, and how and where they were accessing information on best practices and early recommendations by various information sources. We were particularly interested in learning about differences among people with disabilities in both urban and rural areas in the United States. To collect this information, we launched a survey on Amazon MTurk, which is a common platform for recruiting participants in hard-to-reach populations within social science and human subjects research. After a brief set of screener questions asking about age, disability status, and checking for bots, the survey questions asked about participants’ health, daily activities, community participation, trust in information sources, pandemic response behaviors, and how those things have been impacted by changes during the COVID-19 pandemic. The results were analyzed using statistical software and used to produce research briefs, factsheets, and peer-reviewed journal articles, and may be incorporated into future presentations, national conferences, and additional publications.
    • Dataset