The Journey Forward: Impact of COVID-19 on Blind, Low Vision, and Deafblind U.S. Adults
The Journey Forward. Research Report. March 2022. A collage of people wearing masks, walking with a white cane, using a tablet, and getting vaccinated.

The Journey Forward: Impact of COVID-19 on Blind, Low Vision, and Deafblind U.S. Adults

The American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) is pleased to announce the publication of the?Journey Forward?research report, which examines the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on U.S. adults who are blind, low vision, or deafblind. The findings are the results of survey data completed during the summer of 2021. Topics included digital accessibility barriers, transportation and safety challenges, and access to healthcare, food, and medical supplies.

“We gathered this data to help us understand the short- and long-term impact of the pandemic on those with visual disabilities and learn from their experiences so we can address both COVID-created and systemic issues that have managed to persist in the lives of the blind and low vision community,” said Stephanie Enyart, AFB’s Chief Public Policy and Research Officer.

The Journey Forward study continues the research narrative begun with the?Flatten Inaccessibility?study, which examined the impact of COVID-19 on adults with visual impairments in the U.S. a year earlier. Taken together, the two reports paint a vivid picture of the ways millions of Americans have had their lives affected in ways that demonstrate a clear inequity from their sighted counterparts.

Text reads: Barriers to healthcare. About 70% reported having used telehealth to communicate with their doctors during the pandemic. [Icon of a doctor on a computer screen.] However, of those who had used telehealth, 57% reported having accessibility challenges using the platform. [pie chart showing 57%.]


The report includes an in-depth examination of the survey findings for each category, as well as recommendations by the study’s authors to address the issues highlighted by survey participants. A brief sampling of findings includes:

  • Digital inclusion barriers:?As in-person access diminished, reliance on web-based information and interfaces grew. Where these services were inaccessible, there were critical barriers to meeting one’s basic needs. Study participants reported risks and consequences to both physical and mental health. Use of telehealth was attempted by 70% of survey respondents during this period and 57% of those 330 respondents reported having accessibility challenges with telehealth platforms.
  • ?Access to basic needs:?About 47% percent of those who received a vaccine had had someone else schedule the vaccine for them while 34% scheduled the vaccine for themselves or another person. One participant articulated what many people who are blind or have low vision frequently experience: “I think it is assumed that someone else is available (friend, family, whoever) to help/look out for us. Some of us have people to do that. Many people do not. I would rather not have to ask someone to help me but sometimes it is just easier/quicker. It doesn't solve the bigger problem.”
  • Safety concerns:?When asked if they had concerns about maintaining social distancing and monitoring whether others were wearing masks, 71% of 451 respondents reported that they did.
  • ?Transportation:?The pandemic caused nationwide logistical problems with transportation, resulting in significant challenges for people with visual impairments. When asked about seeking healthcare services without a vehicle (for example, by walking or taking the bus), almost half of the 185 respondents reported that they were asked to wait outside the facility until the medical provider was ready to see them. In some cases, exceptions were made, but too many participants were left outside in unsafe conditions, such as extreme temperatures or sitting in parking lots, in which they felt uncomfortable and fearful.
  • ?Healthcare:?Survey respondents expressed considerable concern about barriers to obtaining health care and supplies, and frustration with protocols that did not account for patients or customers with a visual impairment. Of the 202 participants that responded to a question about getting needed healthcare supplies or prescriptions, 43% reported having challenges. Barriers included difficulty getting in touch with the doctor’s office or pharmacy, transportation challenges, and inaccessible websites and prescription labels.

Infographic headlined Barriers in a Car-Oriented Society. Text reads: Almost half of the 185 respondents who sought healthcare services without a car reported that they were asked to wait outside the facility until the medical provider was ready to see them. [illustration shows a person standing between two parked cars.] Quote: There was no designated safe place or assistance on where to go if you did not have a vehicle, so we just sat on the pavement a few feet down from the door. One place told us we could not sit there and would have to wait in a car. I told them we were walkers and then we got told we cannot sit in front of the building. My daughter took me to a parking spot where we sat on the ground. [end quote] Our 2021 Journey Forward survey asked 488 adults who are blind or have low vision about their experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic. Learn more at afb.org/JF. AFB American Foundation for the Blind logo.


Data tables?can be found online in the digital appendix, and the full report is available at?AFB.org/JourneyForward.

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