In
every face of life, there are challenges. This is not different in business.
You do not quit a business because there are challenges. Rather you look for
ways such challenges can be surmounted. You are going to learn strategies you
can use in solving environmental barriers in business.
Five kinds of Environmental Barriers
People with
disabilities can face many Environmental Barriers. These barriers depend on the
person, the type of the disability, and many other things.
There are five broad
types of barriers:
1. Physical barriers
2. Attitude barriers
3. Assistance barriers
4. Policy barriers
5. Work and School Barriers
1. Physical barriers: Is your home accessible? Does it let you move around easily? How accessible is work or school, and the public places you go? Physical barriers can be caused by things like buildings, stairs or hills, doorways, or even the weather and climate.
2. Attitude barriers: These have to do with prejudice and discrimination. Do negative attitudes and prejudice from people you come in contact with keep you from being as productive and successful as possible?
3. Assistance barriers: Does lack of transportation keep you from going where you need to go? Does a lack of good information or medical care keep you from doing what you need to do? Are people in your home and community helpful enough?
4. Policy barriers: Do government rules make road-blocks for you? Can you find the educational, employment, and service programs you need? Do rules and regulations stop you or get in your way?
5. Work
and School Barriers: Are people you interact with at school or work
positive and helpful? Do they support you? Does how they act prevent you from
doing the things you need to do?
We developed a survey that covered all of these barriers. It included several specific examples of each of the five types 25 different barriers in all. Then, we asked more than 70 adults with TBI who had their injury about a year ago to complete the survey.
Most
people with TBI are not very bothered a lot by barriers in the environment. Those
who do have barriers often fall into certain groups.
1. Women seem to say they face more barriers than men. However, men reported more barriers that had to do with work.
2. People who were married when they were injured seemed to face more environmental barriers than people who were not married.
3. People who are African-American or Hispanic reported more barriers than white people. In fact, people who were in other minority groups also reported more barriers. But, white people reported more of two particular types of barriers: those that had to do with bad attitudes, and those relating to lack of support from other people.
4. Physical barriers, like stairs, hills, roads, and buildings were more of a problem for older people with TBI.
5. People who were working or in school before they were injured reported that they had fewer barriers after injury.
6. People who’s TBI causes them to need actual help from others are more likely to report barriers. But, beyond this, the severity of the TBI did not seem to affect the number of environmental barriers that people reported.
These
were the biggest and most common barriers that people did report:
1. Not having the transportation they need
2.
Barriers in their surroundings – like poor lighting, too much noise, crowds. It
also includes things in nature like cold temperatures, too much rain, steep
hills, etc.
3. The attitudes of
people in their own homes or families
Barriers affected people with TBI in several ways
1. People who said they had a lot of barriers were less satisfied with their lives.
2. People had trouble getting out of their houses and moving around their communities also said they had more barriers in their environment.
3. People who reported experiencing negative attitudes or prejudice were less independent and less active in outside activities.
4. People who did not work or go to school reported more barriers. In other words, people who were not doing something “productive” also thought they had more barriers.
Keep in mind that, in spite of the research we described here, the majority of people with TBI in our we study did not report that environmental barriers are a big problem for them. That means that it is very likely that you don’t have a lot of trouble with barriers either. If that is the case, then think of this brochure as just “food for thought.”
However,
if you are dealing with barriers in the environment, you need to think about
whether they are making a difference in your life. Here is a modified version
of the survey we used in our research:
Here are some barriers
that are big problems for you: ones that you experience often, or ones that are
severe problems:
• The attitudes of
others in your home
• The
natural environment — temperature, terrain, and climate
• The
availability of transportation
• The
availability of someone else to help you in your home
• The
availability of someone else to help you in your community
• The
availability of someone else to help you at school or work
• The
availability of information you want or need
• The
availability of health care services and medical care
• The
availability of education and training you want or need
• The attitudes of
others in your community
• The attitudes of
others at school or work
• Problems with
rules and policies of businesses and organizations
• Problems
with government programs and policies
• Problems with
education and employment programs and policies
• Prejudice or
discrimination
• Lack of support
and encouragement from others in your home
• Lack of support
and encouragement from others in your community
• Lack of support
and encouragement from others at school or work
• Lack of program or
services in your community
• Lack
of personal equipment or special adapted devices
• Lack
of computer technology
• Design
and layout of your home
• Design
and layout of buildings and places you use at school or work
• Design
and layout of buildings and places in your community
• Aspects
of your surroundings — lighting, noise, crowds, etc.
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