Have you ever wonder if there is some type of device that can help heal the blind? Brian Mech, who is vice president of Second Sight Medical Products, had created the Argus II. This device was created for those who suffer from a genetic disease called Retinitis Pigmentosa or RP. The disease causes someone to lose vison because the retina isn’t functioning properly. The Argus II can actually send a signal to the implanted chip in the back of the eye’s retina and translates the directives into sight. The humanitarian device is able to change lives for those who struggle from the RP disease.…
Louise and Thomas Spradley are a fairly average American couple. They are young, married, and have one child, Bruce, and they of course love him deeply. One summer, Bruce becomes ill with German measles, or rubella. Just a few days before this diagnosis, Louise discovered that she was pregnant. The doctor tells her that contracting rubella while pregnant could lead to various congenital defects in the newborn. The indefinite quality of this warning serves as the material for Louise and Thomas’s nightmares for the next nine months.…
If you have a high speed Internet connection try visiting the University of Wisconsin-Madison Video on the Web page. Investigate the Introduction to the Screen Reader course. Download and view the 12mb video. You will certainly gain insight and empathy for the extraordinary determination of those with visual disabilities. The importance of assistive technology is brilliantly depicted in Assistive Technology: Enabling Dreams a fine online video from the George Lucas Foundation.…
These three rhetorical devices work together to support the author’s purpose of showing readers with vision loss that there is a way to get back sight by describing the actual technology as stated by a scientific journal, and showing the logic behind the technology and how it got smaller and smarter due to concerns for the patient. By reaching out to old people, the author touched her audience by describing who she was talking to and what solutions there were for them.…
Social attitudes and beliefs impact on individuals with sensory loss as some people treat the individual as if they were incapable to understand. Society is recognising the need of deaf people by putting loop systems in to public buildings such as banks, the cinema and conference facilities. This helps people with hearing aids. Subtitles or signer are available on many TV programs but these are on late at night. Finding work when you have sensory loss can be hard, even thou under the Equality act and disability discrimination act means the employer cannot discriminate against sensory loss it is difficult to convince them they are able to do the job as efficiently as anyone else. These attitudes can knock confidence and may result in the individual not trying and become withdrawn.…
Has anyone ever wondered how it feels to be blind? Imagine being blind, standing outside on a nice day without sight. No sight of the beautiful sky, nor the sun itself, only the feelings and sound. The hot sun, the gentle breeze, the grass and plants flowing in said breeze, all with only audio and touch. This is what it is like to be blind. To read, blind people used to have embossed books with embossed lettering. Embossed books and lettering are no longer used today, thanks to the work of Louis Braille, a blind French teacher at the National Institute for Blind Youth.…
A visual impairment is when a person’s sense of sight is completely gone and the change is irreversible. However this can also mean someone is partially sighted, where their sight may be blurred or only able to see out of one eye. A visual impairment can be caused by age illness or incident; it prevents the patient being able to recognise people by face, body and other visual elements. To overcome tis barrier glasses may be worn in some partial sighted cases, and a form of written communication called braille may be used. Braille is created by making indentations in materials patterned to represent letters without actually outlining the shape of the letter.…
When Lynn was born Louise was hoping for her baby to be healthy. As time went by Louise was thrilled watching as her healthy beautiful baby girl was growing. It was not until Lynn was about 3 months old that Louise began to question that maybe something was wrong with Lynn. As Thomas Spradley tells the story from his accounts he Says, it wasn’t until 3 months later on the 4th of july had he noticed a possible problem with his daughter. Louise, their son Bruce, the grandparents and baby Lynn had gone to the 4th of July celebration parade. This parade was exciting and filled with noise. Yet in the midst of all the Fire engines sounding, crowds yelling and cheering loudly and loud booms and bangs from all the fireworks going off when Louise noticed baby Lynn never flinched and the noise didn't appear to bother her any. After Louise’s discovery, for months…
Cleary School for the Deaf was an extraordinary place to visit. I thought that the facility was well equipped and a pleasant learning environment for all children that attend the school. Cleary’s objective is to provide a nurturing environment where the individual needs of a student is identified and addressed. They provide a secure, emotionally supported environment to treat individual learner’s unique needs. Cleary is committed to meet the diverse needs of their students and to support their families.…
A child may be born with a sight or hearing impairment which affects most areas of the child’s development. If a child is unable to see, they may not have had the opportunity to join in with physical activities, such as running or football, therefore they may be lacking in this area. If a child is deaf, they may not be able to communicate accurately to other people so will have little social skills.…
The most common type of deaf-blindness disease in the world is Usher Syndrome. Usher Syndrome is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous disease. It is inherited in an autosomal recessive inheritance pattern. Worldwide, the chance of a baby being born with Ushers Syndrome is approximately 1 in every 25,000 babies. To date, there are roughly 50,000 people with Ushers Syndrome living in the United States. As stated above, Ushers Syndrome is an inherited disease characterized by hearing impairment and progressive vision loss. The vision loss is due to retinitis pigmentosa, which is a degenerative condition of the retina and this usually appears during adolescence or early adulthood. The balance of an individual is usually also affected with retinitis pigmentosa. The other part of Usher Syndrome, the hearing loss, is due to a genetic mutation affecting nerve cells in the cochlea, a sound transmitting structure in the inner ear. The same genetic effect also adversely affects photoreceptor cells in the retina leading to vision loss.…
The root of many problems is that society tends to try to only fix issues that personally affect the individual. Since America is an individualistic culture, we tend to help solve problems that are motivated by personal achievement, past situations and immediate results. A lot of times we forgetting the bigger picture and looking at a grand scheme issue I would like to solve the lack of education for language available to deaf citizens of third world countries.…
One major reason for the parents of a deaf child to send their kid to…
Braille was devised in 1825 by Louis Braille, a blind Frenchman. He was blinded in an accident while playing with one of his father’s knives. As a boy he developed a mastery over that blindness and as a young man – still a student at school – he created a revolutionary form of communication that transcended blindness and transformed the lives of millions. After two centuries, the braille system remains an invaluable tool of learning and communication for the blind, and it has been adapted for languages worldwide.…
In this world today tons of people are blind, like Louis Braille. Today some of the blind kids are poor that cannot go to school and some of them are that can go to blind schools. In this story Louis Braille struggles rigorously to create new system of reading for blind people. and how his system is received at the the first and second time and the differences between them.…