Fugate
First Name
James
Middle Initial
R
Last Name
Fugate
Department
Engineering Studies
Scholarship Year
2025
Research Center
Non-Center Based
Scholarship Type
Journal Paper
Contributors List
Brian Tomaszewski, David Baldridge, Iskender Mambetkadyrov, James Fugate, Jason Rotoli, Lee Smith, Qing Miao, Sandra Rothenberg
Project Title
Hearing Diversity and Inequality of Emergency Services
Start Date - Month
October
Start Date - Year
2024
End Date Anticipated - Month
October
End Date Anticipated - Year
2025
End Date Actual - Month
October
End Date Actual - Year
2025
Review Types
Blind Peer Reviewed
Student Assistance
Graduate
Projected Cost
$0.00
Funding Source
Grant
Resulting Product
Journal article
Citation

Rothenberg, Sandra, et al. "Hearing Diversity and Inequality of Emergency Services: Perspectives on Greater Societal Inclusion for Deaf Populations." Equality, Diversity and Inclusion: An International Journal ahead-of-print. ahead-of-print (2025): ahead-of-print. Print. *

Abstract

Purpose – We seek to investigate: (1) Where are the perceived gaps or inequalitiesin emergency servicesfor the deaf populations? (2) How do perspectives on these inequalities differ across deaf populations and emergency service providers?

Design/methodology/approach –We conducted three focus groups: two composed of deaf and hard-of-hearing (DHH) persons, and one composed of emergency service providers, with discussions recorded, transcribed and then thematically coded. Themes were compared across different groups.

Findings – We found evidence of communication and accommodation needs among DHH persons during emergencies. Emergency response professionals, however, may not fully understand the lived experience of DHH persons and may not have the training and resources needed to always provide accessible service, leading to serious inequality in emergency services provided to the DHH community.

Originality/value – We are among the first to examine differing perspectives on gapsin emergency services for the DHH, extending disability management literature to external stakeholders and contributing to emergency policy research by highlighting perceptual differences between service providers, who act as street-level bureaucrats interpreting FEMA’s Whole Community Approach, and DHH communities.

264673