Deaf, hard-of-hearing Canadians ask for greater support during COVID-19 pandemic
As Lorin MacDonald watched the COVID-19 pandemic transform the world around her, she avidly hoped attitudes towards her and her fellow deaf and hard-of-hearing Canadians would undergo a similar shift.
But hope has given way to frustration in the months since the global outbreak reached Canada as she’s faced a growing list of barriers to a host of every-day tasks.
The Toronto lawyer, who depends in part on lip-reading to communicate, now finds herself increasingly shut out of conversations as the widespread adoption of opaque masks takes hold across society.
Deliveries of key supplies get sent back to the warehouse after knocks on her door go unheard and unheeded. And the overall shift to virtual meetings and social gatherings leaves her on the sidelines, since much of the technology used to navigate the “new normal” doesn’t allow for real-time captioning or full participation for someone living with hearing loss.


