[humanser] Client handwriting, accessibility, and confidentiality
Ashley Bramlett
bookwormahb at earthlink.net
Tue Oct 13 05:09:47 UTC 2015
Kaiti,
You can use a reader you pick because of informed consent forms. Other blind
people use office staff to assist with reading some.
I wouldn't worry so much about confidentiality.
-----Original Message-----
From: Kaiti Shelton via humanser
Sent: Friday, October 09, 2015 3:17 PM
To: humanser at nfbnet.org
Cc: Kaiti Shelton
Subject: [humanser] Client handwriting, accessibility, and confidentiality
Hi all,
I was presented with a unique challenge that I have not had to
overcome before in practicum this week. I'd be interested in hearing
your thoughts or solutions you have used successfully in similar
situations.
Here's the scenario; I'm in my music therapy practicum, working with a
young man who has Down Syndrome on an individual basis. This client
and I have formed a very successful therapeutic relationship over the
past few weeks. The theoretical model I'm using with him places a
priority on reciprocity and working for the client to get what they
feel they need out of the music therapy treatment. (Music-centered,
client-centered, and resource-oriented if anyone is interested in the
models). On Monday the client presented me with a spiral notebook in
which he had written original song lyrics. He wanted to take the time
in our session to shape them musically, but it was difficult for me
because I did not have access to his handwritten lyrics. In the
following session my supervisor and I asked for his permission to copy
the lyrics, and another professor was able to do so while I continued
with the session so he could take his notebook home with him.
Now I have PDF files of his song lyrics, but I'm wondering how to
ethically convert them to a usable format (they're image PDFs) so I
can read his words and become familiar with them before our next
session on Wednesday. I'm not sure if I can take them to disability
services or use robo braille because that isn't an aspect of
confidentiality that was discussed in general classes. I don't know
if I can make sure that in either case all coppies of the files would
be destroyed. My professor suggested that I find another music
therapy student in my class to read the lyrics to me as I type them
out. We're technically not supposed to even share much information
between teams, but he said we could let it go since I have no one else
on my team this semester and need to get the information somehow, plus
those other students would be bound by confidentiality.
However, I would like to know how to solve this problem myself if it
ever comes up professionally for me, as I'm sure it will I also don't
want to use a reader if I don't have to like a lot of students my age,
so any suggestions for independently gaining access to these lyrics
would be appreciated.
Thanks,
--
Kaiti Shelton
University of Dayton-Music Therapy
President, Ohio Association of Blind Students 2013-Present
Secretary, The National Federation of the Blind Performing Arts
Division 2015-2016
"You can live the life you want; blindness is not what holds you back!"
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