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Report from Indonesia: Improved access to COVID-19 information required for people living with a disability

By Tara P. Sani (Atma Jaya Catholic University of Indonesia/Alzheimer Indonesia).

Indonesia’s deaf and hard of hearing community has sent an open letter to President Joko Widodo (Jokowi) that criticises the Indonesian Government for the lack of access to information regarding the COVID-19 outbreak for people living with a disability. Of especial concern was the absence of sign language interpreters to translate information on the global health crisis.

In response, the Government has provided sign language interpreters and Indonesian subtitles for televised COVID-19 updates.

Although this issue was raised by the deaf and hard of hearing community, it is one that potentially affects all people living with disabilities in Indonesia. Therefore, it is important that the Government ensures information about COVID-19 and social distancing is accessible to everyone.

This includes vulnerable people such as children, prison inmates, people in remote areas, people with learning difficulties and people living with a disability – including those living with dementia.

Without equal access to information, vulnerable people face delayed access to diagnosis and management and will be at a much higher risk of contracting the disease.

References from the media:

  1. News article reporting the open letter to the President from the deaf community

https://health.grid.id/read/352065547/surat-terbuka-disabilitas-rungu-ke-presiden-jokowi-tuntut-hak-isu-covid-19?page=all

Main messages:

In the letter, dated 16 March 2020, the community praised the efforts of the government to spread information about COVID-19 through press conferences, protocols and other measures to tackle the pandemic. However, since the announcement of the first two COVID-19 positive cases in Indonesia, the central government has not been providing sign language interpreters or Indonesian subtitles in press conferences. The letter demanded the government ensures information is accessible for people living with disability by:

The constitution and legislation protecting the rights of accessibility for people with disability in Indonesia:

2. News article on the open letter and interview with Norman Yulian, Chairman of West Java Chapter of the Indonesian Association for Persons with Disability: 

https://health.detik.com/berita-detikhealth/d-4944309/komunitas-tuna-rungu-ri-kritik-penyampaian-informasi-virus-corona

Main messages:

3. News article on the lack of accessible COVID-19 information for people living with a disability

https://www.solider.id/baca/5775-pengabaian-negara-terhadap-hak-informasi-tuli-terkait-wabah-covid19

Main messages:

4. News article on the provision of sign language interpreter

https://www.liputan6.com/disabilitas/read/4204710/juru-bahasa-isyarat-terkait-corona-covid-19-sudah-tersedia

Main messages:

Suggested citation: Sani T (2020) Report from Indonesia: Improved access to COVID-19 information required for people living with a disability.  Article in LTCcovid.org, International Long-Term Care Policy Network, CPEC-LSE. Available at https://ltccovid.org/2020/03/25/report-from-indonesia-improved-access-to-covid-19-information-required-for-people-living-with-a-disability/