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How does a deaf and blind person use a phone?

How does a deaf and blind person use a phone?

Most solutions combine braille and QWERTY keyboards with refreshable displays and screens; e.g., on a smart phone, for reading typed text. The deaf-blind person composes messages on a braille keyboard that appear as text on an LCD screen. The sight person types responses on a mobile device or Bluetooth keyboard.

How does a deaf person use a cell phone?

A person who is deaf, hard of hearing or speech-impaired can communicate by telephone. By using a TTY, a device that consists of a keyboard and display screen, with the telephone handset placed on top of the TTY or a direct phone line connected to the TTY.

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How do deaf-blind people watch TV?

Audio and video information from the TV is sent to a machine called a refreshable braille display so deaf-blind people can read it with their fingers. People who can’t see can also get and send information with a braille line, better known as a refreshable braille display.

How does a deaf person watch a movie?

Movie theaters are required under the Americans with Disabilities Act to provide accommodations for deaf and hard-of-hearing people, which most often come in the form of closed captioning devices like captioning glasses and displays placed on armrests.

Can a blind person use a mobile phone?

Having a visual impairment doesn’t mean that we can’t use a phone, it’s a lifeline for many blind and visually impaired people. We can use mobile phones just like sighted people, we just use accessibility features to enable us to do so.

How do blind and deaf people use technology?

For someone who is partially blind and totally deaf, they might use magnification and other screen enhancements, such as high contrast or inverted colors. For someone who is totally blind and partially deaf, they might use amplified speech output, so the text is converted into speech.

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How can a deaf-blind person make phone calls in Virginia?

A Virginia resident who is deaf-blind can make phone calls using TTY (text telephone)-to-braille with the help of a Virginia Relay Communication Assistant (CA). The CA serves as the interpreter between the two parties and types out the messages so the deaf-blind person can read them using their braille device.

Can deaf people make and receive phone calls?

Each state has a program for people who are deaf or deaf-blind to make and receive phone calls. In Level Access’s home state of Virginia, the program is is Virginia Relay and it is available 24/7.