Computer/Electronic Accommodations Program Brings Real Solutions to Federal Workers and Service Members with Disabilities
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- Date: Sun, 28 Oct 2007 13:46:11 -0400
BlackAnthem.com, MI, USA
Saturday, October 27, 2007
Computer/Electronic Accommodations Program Brings Real Solutions to Federal
Workers and Service Members with Disabilities
By Patricia Opong-Brown
Blackanthem Military News
Patricia Opong-Brown, TRICARE Management Activity
Oct 27, 2007 - 12:05:56 PM
FALLS CHURCH, Va. - A federal employee we will call Jennifer, was severely
burned over 70 percent of her body in an office explosion. She felt hopeless,
wondered if she would be able to live independently or ever return to work.
Jennifer went to the Department of Defense (DoD) Computer/Electronic
Accommodations Program (CAP) to see what they could do for her.
After seeing a demonstration of the voice recognition technology, and how it
could enable her to work and live independently, she realized there was hope.
The CAP office does not refer to Jennifer as a Workers' Compensation claimant;
rather they refer to her as a Pentagon survivor. That office explosion
happened September 11, 2001; it was her second day on the job.
CAP was launched in 1990 as the centrally-funded, reasonable accommodations
program for DoD employees with disabilities. The program is under TRICARE
Management Activity. Amazingly, many of the technologies cost less than $500 -
but their value is immeasurable.
"The program is meant to cover a couple of specific populations; employees with
disabilities working within DoD or in the 65 federal partner agencies we
support, and our war-wounded active duty service members," says Dinah Cohen,
CAP Director. CAP is there to make information more accessible to federal
workers or service members with disabilities and remove roadblocks to
employment opportunities. It supports people with cognitive or communication
disabilities, people who are blind or have low vision, people who are deaf or
hard of hearing, and people with dexterity disabilities.
Before purchasing the assistive technologies, CAP conducts a needs assessment
to ensure the proper assistive devices and training are provided. The
assessments are done on a case-by-case basis because disabilities are not
"cookie cutter" conditions. The CAP staff looks at the individual, their job
and possible solutions when conducting the assessment.
The technology for blind people includes Braille and auditory accommodations.
The station at the CAP Technology Evaluation Center (CAPTEC) has a computer
with a standard keyboard as well as a refreshable Braille display. Refreshable
Braille is an electro-mechanical device for displaying Braille characters,
usually by means of raising dots through holes in a flat surface. The display
usually sits under the computer keyboard In addition, "anything that is on the
computer's monitor (MS Word document, MS Excel spreadsheet, Internet Browser,
Email, etc.) is provided in an auditory format giving the user equal access to
electronic information," said, Mark Rew, CAP Blind/Low Vision Team Leader.
When evaluating a candidate, Rew asks a series of questions to get to know what
kind of work the individual does, how much time will be spent on the computer,
how much of the work relies on hard copy (print) and if equipment is needed to
convert text into Braille hard copy. For instance, a service member who lost
his eyesight as a result of an explosion in Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF)
was evaluated at CAPTEC, located in Room 2A259 in the Pentagon. He got the
necessary equipment, returned to his military career, got a promotion and is
back in school to further his education.
CAP also offers technology for people with dexterity disabilities. "These
disabilities impact quadriplegics, paraplegics, individuals with multiple
sclerosis and cerebral palsy, and individuals who have developed disabling
conditions such as carpal tunnel syndrome and tendonitis," said Michael Young,
CAPTEC Manager. The technology available for this group is voice recognition.
It allows an individual to speak into a microphone and the software
"translates" their voice directly into text in various programs, such as word
processing, data bases or email. "It is very easy to achieve 98 to 99 percent
accuracy," said Young.
"By fulfilling the mission of providing real solutions for real needs, CAP is
helping to make the Federal government the model employer for people with
disabilities," said Cohen. Since its inception, CAP has filled over 61,000
requests for job accommodations and continues to grow every year. Fifty
percent of users have some form of dexterity disabilities, 30 percent have
visual disabilities and the other users are deaf or hard of hearing.
Many of those helped recently by CAP are service men and women who were injured
in Afghanistan or Iraq. Through the CAP Wounded Service Member Initiative, "we
support wounded service members by providing needs assessments, assistive
technology and training throughout all phases of recovery and the transition to
employment," said Ms. Cohen.
CAP works with Medical Treatment Facility staff such as case managers,
physicians and liaisons to increase awareness of assistive technologies and
training available at no charge. CAP is committed to ensuring wounded service
members have the tools early in their recovery and rehabilitation to ensure
re-employment and positive life experiences are part of their futures.
Helen Keller once said, "The public must learn that the blind man is neither
genius nor a freak nor an idiot. He has a mind that can be educated; a hand
which can be trained; ambitions, which it is right for him to strive to realize
and it is the duty of the public to help him make the best of himself so that
he can win light through work." CAP brings Keller's words to life.
More information about the CAP program is available by visiting the CAP Web
site at: www.tricare.mil/cap.
http://www.blackanthem.com/News/Veteran_Affairs_27/Computer_Electronic_Accommodations_Program_Brings_Real_Solutions_to_Federal_Workers_and_Service_Members_with_Disabilities11101.shtml
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