[Diabetes-talk] Diabetes resolution

Jerry Hathaway jerry.hathaway2 at frontier.com
Tue Nov 19 19:55:53 UTC 2013


The NFB of Oregon passed a resolution 
at our state convention on November 3, 2013 Regarding Advocacy to Make Diabetes Tools and Technology Accessible to the Blind. The resolution is listed below.



Resolution 2013-01  Regarding Diabetes 

 

Regarding Advocacy to Make Diabetes Tools and Technology Accessible to the Blind

 

WHEREAS, The National Federation of the Blind has, since 1940, championed the independence of the blind and worked to make the world accessible to and safe for the blind; and

 

WHEREAS, to help increase the independence of blind people, the National Federation of the Blind has fought to make technology, readily available to the sighted, accessible for the blind; and

 

WHEREAS, according to the National Eye Institute (NEI) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), diabetic retinopathy is the most common cause of blindness, affecting 4.1 million American adults over age 40, and

 

WHEREAS, very little technology currently on the market for constantly or periodically monitoring blood glucose, accurately delivering insulin, or performing other tasks to control diabetes is accessible to the blind, and insulin pens carry a disclaimer that they should not be used by the blind without supervision; and

 

WHEREAS, technology has been demonstrated to increase diabetes control in the sighted, and the same technology, made accessible to the blind would improve diabetes control among blind and visually impaired diabetics, and increase independence in maintaining such control; and

 

WHEREAS, the need for improved accessibility of lifesaving diabetes technology has been largely overlooked: Now, therefore,

 

BE IT RESOLVED by the National Federation of the Blind of Oregon in convention assembled this 3rd day of November, 2013, in the city of Salem, Oregon, that the National Federation of the Blind of Oregon and its Diabetes Action Network division work closely with companies developing pens, pumps, glucometers, and other lifesaving diabetes control tools and technology to integrate accessibility for the blind and deaf-blind into the design and manufacture of such items; and

 

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the National Federation of the Blind of Oregon enlist the support of the American Diabetes Association, the American Association of Retired Persons, the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists, and the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services to establish and implement accessibility standards for diabetes technology; and

 

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the National Federation of the Blind of Oregon urge manufacturers of technology that provides information to the blind and deaf-blind about diabetes management to recognize that creating technology useful only to the sighted creates a circumstance that discriminates against the blind and deaf-blind, and urge such manufacturers further to recognize that the blind and deaf-blind of Oregon will join with other blind and deaf-blind people throughout the nation to take such action as may be necessary to end this discrimination; and

 

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Diabetes Action Network of the National Federation of the blind of Oregon publicize widely the inaccessibility of diabetes tools and technology as they are currently marketed, and the unnecessary hardship their inaccessibility creates in the lives of blind and deaf-blind diabetics.

 

Jerry





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