Facilitators of and barriers to labor market participation among people with acquired deafblindness: A scoping review
Eline C. M. Heppe, Natascha S. Søndergaard, Emma Klaassen, Michelle Bak, Marleen Smits, Emma Vaillant

TL;DR
This review explores what helps or hinders people with acquired deafblindness from participating in the labor market.
Contribution
The study systematically identifies facilitators and barriers using the ICF framework for people with acquired deafblindness.
Findings
Most facilitators and barriers were found in the 'Environmental Factors' domain of the ICF framework.
Vocational rehabilitation services may not be effective due to barriers in the 'Services, Systems, and Policies' subdomain.
More facilitators than barriers were identified, suggesting potential for improving labor market participation.
Abstract
This scoping review aims to identify factors that facilitate or hinder labor market participation of people with an acquired hearing and vision impairment, also called acquired deafblindness (ADB). For people with ADB, participation in society is not a given, and work is a key aspect of societal participation. A literature search was conducted in Web of Science, MEDLINE, and PsycINFO via Ovid. The studies included involved people with ADB, results on labor market participation, and a description of at least one facilitator or barrier. Of 2,548 articles identified, 13 met the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Using the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) framework, 90 facilitators and 66 barriers were identified. Most facilitators and barriers were identified in the “Environmental Factors” domain, while the fewest facilitators were in the “Body…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHearing Impairment and Communication · Disability Education and Employment · Assistive Technology in Communication and Mobility
