Intersectionality and access to visual rehabilitation services: Experiences of people with low vision, a qualitative study

Low vision is a condition of visual impairment, generated by an underlying pathology that affects visual functioning and the development of daily activities. In the field of visual impairment, the developments in the analysis of access to rehabilitation services are scarce and incipient. The study a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe British journal of visual impairment Vol. 41; no. 4; pp. 831 - 842
Main Authors Oviedo-Cáceres, María del Pilar, Arias-Valencia, Samuel, Hernández-Quirama, Andrea, Ruiz-Rodríguez, Myriam, Guisasola-Valencia, Laura
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London, England SAGE Publications 01.12.2023
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ISSN0264-6196
1744-5809
DOI10.1177/02646196221104902

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Summary:Low vision is a condition of visual impairment, generated by an underlying pathology that affects visual functioning and the development of daily activities. In the field of visual impairment, the developments in the analysis of access to rehabilitation services are scarce and incipient. The study approaches the understanding of the experiences of people with low vision in Medellín, Colombia, in their search for visual rehabilitation services. Ethnographic collective case study was conducted. Intersectionality was adopted to explore people’s experiences with low vision management health services. Five women and four men with low vision who attended the healthcare center participated in the study. Twenty-nine interviews and 16 participant observation exercises were carried out. Three categories emerged in the study: (1) I had never heard of low vision services; (2) Interaction with the health system: A path of struggles; and (3) Barriers that are exacerbated by the intersection of multiple identities and systems of oppression. The Colombian health system acts as an axis of structural oppression that interacts with the economic condition, educational level, and geographical location to generate greater difficulties for the identification of low vision management options, which also interact with the multiple and dynamic identities of each subject.
ISSN:0264-6196
1744-5809
DOI:10.1177/02646196221104902