在我们日益数字化的世界中,数字包容在获得护理和支持方面的重要性

IF 0.2 Q4 SOCIAL ISSUES Journal of Social Inclusion Pub Date : 2021-12-22 DOI:10.36251/josi.252
Lyndal Sleep, Paul R. Harris
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引用次数: 0

摘要

帮助行业越来越多地使用数字技术,如自动决策、人工智能和视频或远程医疗,以满足客户的需求(Carney, 2020;亨曼2019)。大流行加速了这一趋势,因为我们更多地依靠数字连接和服务模式来确保封锁期间的连续性和护理,并遵守社交距离指南(Meijer, & Webster, 2020)。关于实时视频(如Zoom)的咨询,曾经是未来主义、投机小说的主题,现在已经变得司空见惯,甚至平淡无奇。自动化的数字解决方案在不同的人类服务环境中也变得越来越普遍。例如,近年来,随着疫情期间获得在线支持的人数不断增加,澳大利亚服务局(Services Australia)推出了聊天机器人,利用人工智能来理解并回答你的问题。在2020年的森林大火期间,甚至面部识别技术也首次在澳大利亚的社会服务背景下进行了试验,允许在证件在火灾中被毁后对有需要的人进行快速识别和评估(Hendry, 2020)。现金的逐步淘汰以及数字货币和服务平台的兴起进一步证明,我们的世界正迅速变得更加数字化。与此同时,护理和支持的获得越来越依赖于数字技术的获取。这就提出了一个新的挑战,即数字包容。数字包容是指确保所有人都能访问和使用数字技术和服务(澳大利亚数字包容指数,2021年;联合国,2021年)。如果我们的目标是避免基于数字包容/排斥的日益扩大的鸿沟,那么如果对所有数字事物的拥抱继续有增无减,那么关注不平等问题就至关重要(Crawford, 2021)。
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The importance of digital inclusion in accessing care and support in our increasingly digitised world
The helping professions are increasingly using digital technologies like automated decision making, artificial intelligence and video or telehealth to meet the needs of their clients (Carney, 2020; Henman 2019). This trend was accelerated by the pandemic, as we relied more on digital connections and service models to ensure continuity and care during periods of lockdown and in accordance with social distancing guidelines (Meijer, & Webster, 2020). Consultations over real-time video (e.g. Zoom), once the topic of futuristic, speculative fiction have become commonplace, even mundane. Automated, digital solutions are also becoming increasingly commonplace across different human service contexts. For instance, the use of chat bots by Services Australia that use artificial intelligence to understand your questions, and answer them, have been rolled out over recent years as the number of people accessing online support during the pandemic escalated. Even facial recognition technology was trialled in Australia for the first time in a social services context, during the 2020 bushfires, allowing speedy identification and assessment of people in need after their documentation had been destroyed in the fires (Hendry, 2020). The phasing out of cash and rise of digital currencies and service platforms are further evidence that our world is rapidly becoming more digitised. Concordantly, the receipt of care and support is increasingly becoming dependent on access to digital technologies. This presents a new challenge – i.e. digital inclusion. Digital inclusion is about ensuring all can access and use digital technology and services (Australian Digital Inclusion Index, 2021; United Nations, 2021). If we aim to avoid a growing divide based on digital inclusion/exclusion, it is vital that attention to inequalities are at the forefront of our minds if the embrace of all things digital continues unabated (Crawford, 2021).
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CiteScore
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21 weeks
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