Deaf file suit against doctors, state agency on anniversary of disability law

Deaf file suit against doctors, state agency on anniversary of disability law

Jeremy Roebuck
The Monitor

McALLEN – Sergio Ayala is tired of not being heard.

Deaf from a young age, he has explained to business owners over and over
again that his disability warrants special accommodation, only to be turned
away.

He has repeatedly pleaded with doctors for access to interpreters. He has
struggled at government offices to communicate with hand-written notes. And
he has often had to rely on signing friends to complete the most basic
commercial transactions.

“I feel like it’s me against the whole hearing world,” Ayala said through a
sign language interpreter.

On Tuesday, a South Texas legal services group filed lawsuits against the
Texas Health and Human Services Commission and two Rio Grande Valley doctors
for allegedly failing to comply with federal law when it comes to dealing
with the deaf.

Although the Americans with Disabilities Act guarantees their right to a
sign language interpreter at government agencies or medical offices, full
compliance with that mandate remains spotty two decades after the law was
passed, said Corinna Spencer-Scheurich, director of the South Texas Civil
Rights Project, which is representing the deaf plaintiffs in their suits.

“There are no ifs, ands or buts about this,” she said. “If you need an
interpreter, you’re entitled to one at the business’ expense. Our clients
made repeated requests and were denied.”

For Adam Schraer, that failure has left his family without food twice in the
eight years.

Deaf and reliant government assistance to feed his family, the Brownsville
resident has repeatedly asked the Health and Human Services Commission to
provide a sign language interpreter in advance of his periodic food stamp
eligibility interviews.

His ability to understand questions from government workers and respond with
accurate descriptions about his income and bills on his own determine the
amount of food assistance he can receive.

But after allegedly being denied an interpreter on four separate occasions,
the commission revoked Schraer’s food stamp benefits, forcing him and his
wife to ration to keep their children from going hungry.

“If I don’t have my food stamps, my family does not have enough to eat,” he
said in an affidavit filed with his lawsuit against the agency. “We have to
borrow food and money. We have to eat less and conserve food.”

A commission spokesman declined to comment on the specifics of Schraer’s
case but said that agency policy requires workers to accommodate those with
documented disabilities.

Doctor’s offices in particular pose a problem for the hearing impaired, said
Brooke Hernandez, manager of deaf services for the Valley Association of
Independent Living, a group charged with aiding the disabled.

The most frequent complaints she hears from clients involve them resorting
to writing notes or to relying on friends and relatives who know sign
language in order to communicate with their physicians. With complex medical
jargon often involved and privacy issues at stake neither is an acceptable
solution, she said.

Ayala, of Mission, waited for nearly five hours at his physician’s office
earlier this year for an interpreter he was told was on his way. Ultimately,
the man never arrived, and Ayala left without seeing the doctor.

He eventually returned with a friend who helped translate discussion over an
“embarrassing medical issue.”

“I didn’t have any other choice,” he said.

For others the results can be more serious.

Rolando Luna requested an interpreter while taking his son to a McAllen
pediatrician only to be told the office wouldn’t pay since his 9-year-old
child was not deaf.

His muddled efforts to describe his son’s symptoms through hand-written
notes resulted in a misdiagnosis and the prescription of medicine that made
the child even sicker, Luna claims in his lawsuit.

Spencer-Scheurich hopes the suits filed Monday will remind all doctors and
government offices of their responsibilities to disabled clients. But after
dealing with the same problems two decades after promised reform, she
recognizes that change comes slowly.

“We have come a long way in the last 20 years,” she said. “But we still have
a long way to go for all people to have fair and equal treatment.”

Jeremy Roebuck covers courts and general assignments for The Monitor. You
can reach him at (956) 587-9377.

Source:
http://www.themonitor.com/news/file-41189-agency-law.html

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