Delhi University is providing sign language training to nursing staff in hospitals across the national capital to help them deal with hearing impaired patients.
"The use of sign language is minimal in our country and a survey done by DU students had revealed that even visually impaired people are not aware of the proper technical language in place. They just develop their own signs for communicating according to their convenience," Hina Nandrajog, Associate Professor at DU's Cluster Innovation Centre (CIC) told PTI.
Nandrajog, along with a team of six DU students, is working on the project in which training sessions are being conducted for nursing staff to give them basic knowledge of the sign language and how it can help in dealing with hearing impaired patients.
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"Deaf patients have to attend consultation with no communication support and rely on written notes or they have to be accompanied by someone to act as an interpretor," she added.
The training-cum-counselling programme, which began last fortnight, has so far been conducted at Hindu Rao and Kasturba hospitals.
"We have written to AIIMS and GTB hospital for the next session. Other hospitals are also being lined up. We have also compiled a hospital-specific vocabulary for training purpose," Nandrajog said.
In the first phase of the project, DU had trained over 2,000 police personnel in order to sensitise them about the problems faced by deaf in communicating with police.
The workshops were conducted in collaboration with the National Association of Deaf (NAD) and Noida Deaf Society (NDS).