Deafblindness
Deafblind Scotland works with adults who are dual sensory
impaired, many of them having become dual sensory
impaired later in life - this is called acquired
deafblindness. Those with acquired deafblindness fall into three
main groups:
- People who are born deaf and later lose their sight. This may
be as a result of Usher Syndrome, which is a major cause of
deafblindness.
- People who are born blind and later lose their hearing.
- People who lose both sight and hearing in later life.
There is no accepted definition of deafblindness to which
everyone subscribes. However, the most commonly used definition is
the European one:
"Persons are regarded as deafblind if they have a severe degree of
combined visual and auditory impairment resulting in problems of
communication, information and mobility." Breaking Through Report
(1988)
In 2005 as part of the joint futures working group an edata set was
agreed for use in identifying deafblindness. (Scottish
Executive Data Set Dual Seneory Impairment). The
terms "deafblindness," "dual sensory loss," "combined sight and
hearing loss" are interchangeable.
There are other ways of defining deafblindness. The terms people
might use to describe themselves are:
- deaf with a visual problem
- blind with a hearing problem
- partially sighted, partially deaf
- having Usher Syndrome
- deafblind
- dual impaired
- dual sensory impaired
- hard of hearing with sight loss
- a hearing aid user with a sight problem
- blind and hard of hearing
One severe impairment e.g. severe hearing loss accompanied by
partial sight or moderate sight loss still constitutes
deafblindness. The reason the later or secondary loss only requires
to be moderate before compounding effects are felt is that the
second sense has been relied on to compensate for the first loss.
Normally a profoundly deaf sign language user who becomes partially
sighted will have inherent problems with communication, access to
information and mobility. In a similar manner a hard-of-hearing
person who has always lipread, when vision deteriorates at all will
have problems. Equally a blind person who has relied upon sharp
hearing will have real problems if hearing substantially
deteriorates.