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Delivering Quality Healthcare for People With Disability

Suzanne C Smeltzer

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English
SIGMA Theta Tau International
15 January 2021
Awarded first place in the 2021 AJN Book of the Year Awards in History and Public Policy!
Those with disability-be it mild and a mere inconvenience, or one that necessitates the use of high-tech support for survival-have repeatedly reported that their healthcare needs are not adequately addressed by healthcare providers. Most healthcare professionals, including nurses, are unfamiliar with the consequences of disabling conditions in the lives of individuals with disability. They lack knowledge about how to communicate effectively with those with all types of disability, do not consider the effect of individuals' disability on their ability to participate in health-promotion efforts, harbor negative attitudes and bias toward them, stereotype them, and often perceive them as unable (or unwilling) to take an active part in their own care.

Ineffective communication on the part of healthcare professionals when interacting with individuals with disability has broad implications and repercussions. Healthcare providers who believe they know best, and are the experts on disability, will continue to ignore the wishes and preferences of individuals with disability and their desire to make decisions about their own lives and healthcare. Many healthcare professionals presume people with disability are reluctant to participate in health promotion.

Individuals with disability have reported that healthcare providers are uncomfortable and unwilling to discuss issues related to sex and sexuality with them. They have further reported that healthcare providers assume that they are uninterested (or perhaps believe that they should be uninterested) in sexual relationships, intimacy, pregnancy, and childbearing. Women with disability who have elected to become mothers and have sought out prenatal care have reported that their healthcare providers' first assumption was that the reason individuals with disability; these agencies and organizations have identified changing the educational preparation of healthcare professionals as a primary strategy and an important first step.

Several organizations, with input from individuals with disability, have developed competencies that should be expected of all healthcare professionals who interact with individuals with disability. The Alli-ance for Disability in Health Care Education has urged nursing, medicine, and other healthcare professions to endorse these competencies with the goal of moving forward in the effort to improve the healthcare of individuals with disability. Nurses have been very involved in the development of these competencies from the beginning of the process. Several nursing organizations, including Sigma, have endorsed the cross-discipline competencies developed by the Alliance for Disability in Health Care Education (2019).

This book is based on the principle and belief that all healthcare professionals regardless of discipline, level of education, or role within the healthcare system have a role in caring for individuals with disability. As such, they need a basic understanding of the issue of disability to provide appropriate, optimal, and sensitive healthcare to those with disability. These issues and more are addressed in the chapters of this book. It is intended to provide information to nurses, nursing students, and other healthcare professionals to enable them to communicate with and provide quality healthcare to individuals with disability.

By:  
Imprint:   SIGMA Theta Tau International
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 17mm
Weight:   426g
ISBN:   9781948057455
ISBN 10:   194805745X
Pages:   320
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

SUZANNE C. SMELTZER, EdD, RN, ANEF, FAAN Suzanne C. Smeltzer is the Richard and Marianne Kreider Endowed Professor in Nursing for Vulnerable Populations at Villanova University M. Louise Fitzpatrick College of Nursing. She has conducted research related to disability for more than 25 years and has presented multiple educational programs on the topic for healthcare professionals, professional organizations, and populations of individuals with disability. She has served as a consultant to nursing faculty and schools of nursing on integration of disability in their curricula. Smeltzer has received multiple awards for her work related to disability, including the 2016 Nurse.com/Gannett Foundation Lectureship Award for Diversity, Inclusion, and Sustainability in Nursing Education from the American Association of Colleges of Nursing. She was the first author/editor of Brunner & Suddarth's Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, published by Lippincott Walters-Kluwer from 1992 to 2014, and continues to write the textbook's chapter on disability and chronic illness. This remains the only widely used medical-surgical nursing textbook that includes a section specifi-cally on disability as well as disability-related issues throughout the book. The textbook has been translated into multiple languages and is used around the world. She was inducted into the American Academy of Nursing in 1992 and the Sigma International Nurse Researcher Hall of Fame in 2019 for her work on disability. Smeltzer has been the driver of the standardized patients with disabilities project at Villanova University's College of Nursing, which ultimately resulted in the development of the Advancing Care Excellence for Persons with Disabilities (ACE.D) component of the National League for Nursing's series on advancing care excellence for vulnerable populations. She has had an active role in the development of competencies related to disability for nurses and other healthcare professionals. In addition, she has received research and programmatic funding related to disability and published widely on the issue. Her research has focused on attitudes of nurses toward individuals with disability, inclusion of disability-related content in nursing curricula and textbooks, and health issues of women with disability, including those related to pregnancy.

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