美国各州卫生机构和组织学习:新冠肺炎期间网站可访问性的探索性分析

IF 1.3 Q2 INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE Information Polity Pub Date : 2023-05-11 DOI:10.3233/ip-220045
Michelle Allgood, Ashlee Frandell
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2019冠状病毒病大流行暴露了残疾人社区成员无法获得政府信息通信技术(ict)的问题。组织在信息通信技术可及性方面的学习可能受到影响战略和假设或价值观和规范的因素的影响。利用2021年两个时间段收集的数据,我们研究了美国州卫生机构COVID-19信息和疫苗网站的可访问性如何随着时间的推移而改善。我们研究了时间、国家政策和党派关系如何影响围绕网站可访问性的组织学习。我们的分析确定,与COVID-19相关的网站在互联网上存在的时间越长,该网站的可访问性就越低。我们还发现,更广泛的内部状态可访问性策略与满足基本可访问性要求的网站更相关。此外,我们发现党派关系在满足基本的可访问性需求方面发挥了意想不到的作用,尽管国家政策和政治并不影响信息通信技术是否符合可访问性的最佳实践标准。我们的论文围绕影响组织学习政府网站可访问性的因素展开了讨论,并指出了未来的研究问题,其中主要的ICT功能不受快速发展的流行病的影响。
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U.S. state health agencies and organizational learning: An exploratory analysis of website accessibility during COVID-19
The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the inaccessibility of government information and communication technologies (ICTs) for members of the disability community. Organizational learning around ICT accessibility can be impacted by factors influencing strategies and assumptions or values and norms. Using data collected over two time periods in 2021, we study how the accessibility of US state health agencies COVID-19 information and vaccine websites improve over time. We examine how time, state policies, and partisanship influence organizational learning around website accessibility. Our analysis determines that the longer a COVID-19 related website exists on the Internet, the less accessible the website. We also find that more extensive internal state accessibility policies are more correlated with websites that meet fundamental accessibility requirements. Additionally, we find that partisanship plays an unexpected role in meeting fundamental accessibility demands, although both state policies and politics do not influence if an ICT meets the best practices standards of accessibility. Our paper initiates a discussion around the factors that influence organizational learning about government website accessibility and points to future research questions where the primary ICT function is not influenced by a rapidly evolving pandemic.
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来源期刊
Information Polity
Information Polity INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
10.00%
发文量
42
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