>From the file in portable document format http://dsc.ucsf.edu/UCSF/pdf/REPORT13.pdf Computer and Internet Use Among People with Disabilities by H . Stephen Kaye, Ph. D. Disability Statistics Center Institute for Health and Aging U n i versity of Califo rn i a San Fra n c i s c o, Califo rn i a March, 2000 National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research U. S. D e p a rtment of Education Disability Statistics Report 13 ii Acknowledgments The author is grateful to the following individuals for their contributions to this report: Mitch LaPlante, for guidance on the analysis methods; Jack McNeil and Alexandra Enders, for helpful feedback; David K e e r, project off i c e r, and the staff of NIDRR; and Will Leber, graphic designer. Disclaimer This report was prepared under ED Grant #H133B980045. The views expressed herein are those of the participants. No official endorsement by the U. S. Department of Education is intended or should be inferred. Availability Individuals with disabilities may obtain this document in an alternate format (for example: Braille, large print, audiotape, or computer diskette) on request. Individuals who use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) may call the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1- 800- 877- 8339 between 8 a. m. and 8 p. m., Eastern time, Monday through Friday. To obtain additional printed copies of this publication, please contact the Disability Statistics Center or N I D R R : Disability Statistics Center University of California, San Francisco Box 0646, Laurel Heights 3333 California Street San Francisco, CA 94143- 0646 http:// www. dsc. ucsf. edu E- mail: distats@ itsa. ucsf. edu (415) 502- 5210 Suggested Citation Kaye, H. S. (2000). Computer and Internet Use Among People with Disabilities. Disability Statistics Report (13). Washington DC: U. S. Department of Education, National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research. David Keer U. S. Department of Education OSERS/ NIDRR Switzer Building, Room 3431 Washington, D. C. 20202 h t t p : / / w w w. e d . g o v / o ff i c e s / O S E R S / N I D R R E- mail: david_ keer@ ed. gov (202) 205- 5633 Computer and Internet Use Among People With Disabilities iii INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 DATASOURCE AND METHODS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 ANALYSIS RESULTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Age and Gender . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Employment Status . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Educational Attainment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Family Income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Race and Ethnicity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 Reasons for Internet Use . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11 CONCLUSIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 REFERENCES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 CONTENTS Disability Statistics Report 13 iv Computer and Internet Use Among People With Disabilities 1 Computer technology and the Internet have a t remendous potential to broaden the lives and i n c rease the independence of people with disabilities. Those who have difficulty leaving their homes can now log in and order groceries, shop for appliances, re s e a rch health questions, participate in online discussions, catch up with friends, or make new ones. Blind people, who used to wait months or years for the information they needed to be made available in Braille or on audiotape, can now access the very same news stories, magazine articles, government reports, and information on consumer p roducts at the very same time it becomes available to the sighted population. People who have diff iculty holding a pen or using a keyboard can use the latest speech recognition software to write letters, pay their bills, or perform work- related tasks. These new technologies hold great pro m i s e , but as this report makes abundantly clear, the computer revolution has left the vast majority of people with disabilities behind. Only one- quarter of people with disabilities own computers, and only one- tenth ever make use of the Internet. Elderly people with disabilities, and those with low incomes or low educational attainment, are even less likely to take advantage of these new technologies. African Americans with disabilities also have an especially low rate of computer and Internet use. Extensive media coverage was devoted to a recent analysis (National Telecommunications and Information Administration, 1999) documenting huge racial and ethnic gaps in access to electro n i c technologies in the United States. The pre s e n t report, using data from the same survey, demonstrates that gaps in computer and Internet use based on disability status are just as large as those based on race and ethnicity. INTRODUCTION Disability Statistics Report 13 2 Computer and Internet Use Among People With Disabilities 3 The Current Population Survey (CPS) is a nationally re p resentative survey of appro x i m a t e l y 50,000 U. S. households each month. Conducted by the Census Bureau for the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the basic CPS questionnaire focuses on employment status and household income. The sample consists of eight panels, with a new panel b rought into rotation every month. Households in each panel are interviewed eight times for four months in a ro w, and then, after an eight- month b reak, during the same four calendar months of the following year. Supplementary questionnaires are often included along with the basic monthly survey. The pre s e n t analysis is based on data from two such supplements: the 1998 Computer and Internet Use Supplement, conducted in December of that year, and the 1999 Annual Demographic Survey, conducted three months later, in Marc h . The Computer and Internet Use Supplement contained questions on household computer ownership and Internet access, as well as questions on specific uses of the Internet by each household member. It was conducted for the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) as a means of surveying the degree of penetration of computer technology in the general population. NTIAs analysis found significant gaps in access to computers and the Internet, based on factors such as family income, race and ethnicity, and educational attainment. Disability is not mentioned in NTIAs re p o r t , because the supplement was not designed to meas u re computer and Internet use among people with disabilities. No questions on disability status were asked in the supplement, nor does the basic monthly survey provide any useful way of identifying a general sample of the population with disabilities. 1 Unlike the monthly survey, however, the Marc h demographic supplement does include a single, b road question on work disability. Respondents are asked whether anyone in the household has a health problem or disability which prevents them f rom working or which limits the kind or amount of work they can do. The question provides a re a s o nable way of identifying a sample of persons at least 15 years of age who are limited in their ability to work. Work disability is a narrower and more pro blematic definition of disability than activity limitation or functional limitation; it is also of somewhat dubious validity for people without work histories, and for those elderly people who re t i red from work long ago. Because of the longitudinal nature of the CPS, it is possible to link data from the two above- mentioned supplemental surveys. Of the eight panels interviewed in December 1998, two were re - i n t e rviewed the following Marc h . 2 Thus, for one- quarter of the sample, minus missing responses, it is possible to obtain the work disability status of those persons whose computer and Internet usage was separately measured. The two panels for which both surveys w e re administered number 30,128 re c o rds, out of a total of 122,935 re c o rds for the entire Computer/ Internet supplement. In 91.6 percent of these cases it is possible to merge data from the two supplements; the remaining 8.4 percent (2522 re c o rds) have been dropped for lack of work disability data. Simple non- response is one reason for missing data. Another is that the CPS is a survey of households rather than of families, and no attempt is made to recontact families who moved between interviews. The new residents of the household are interviewed instead, which leaves us with no information on the disability status of the persons of intere s t . The merged sample used in this analysis numbers 27,606 re c o rds, or 22.5 percent of the full Computer/ Internet Supplement sample. Some 2,196 re c o rds re p resent persons identified as having work disabilities. The reduced sample lacks the statistical power for a highly detailed analysis of the computer and Internet use habits of people with disabilities, but it is adequate to provide comparisons of computer ownership and Internet use among broad sub- populations with and without work disabilities. For the purposes of evaluating computer and DATA SOURCE AND METHODS 1 It would be possible, however, to use the monthly survey to analyze the population unable to work because of health, but this is an overly restrictive definition of disability. 2 It is fortuitous that the survey was conducted in December, so that there was a partial overlap with the March demographic supplement. The previous supplement on computer and Internet use, conducted in October 1997, had no panels that overlapped with March 1997 or 1998. Disability Statistics Report 13 4 probability of a family changing residence during the three- month lag between interviews is also likely to vary with these characteristics. In order to reduce biases due to missing data (as well as to account for the missing panels), individual records in the merged sample have been re- weighted so as to obtain the same population estimate as the full sample in 60 age- sex- race cells (15 age bins, 2 sexes, and 2 races black vs. other). In the analysis of households, the re- weighting (based on the original household weight) uses the age, sex, and race of the first respondent listed in the survey roster. For this analysis, 40 age- sex- race cells are used for post- stratification, with the number of age bins reduced to 10 so that the few households headed by persons under 20 years of age are all relegated to a single age bin. Because the estimates in this report are based on a sample of the population, they are subject to sampling error. Estimates of sampling errors have been calculated using formulas provided by the B u reau of the Census (Bureau of the Census, 1999). 3 In the data tables, estimates with low statistical reliability (standard error greater than 30 percent of the estimate) are flagged with an asterisk. All comparisons mentioned in the text have been tested for statistical significance, and, unless otherwise stated, are significant at the 95 percent confidence level or greater (p<. 05). Internet use among various racial and ethnic groups, this report imitates the NTIA study in using the household as the unit of analysis. The households racial and ethnic classification is that of the first respondent listed in the survey roster generally the person in whose name the home is owned or rented. Unlike the NTIA analysis, however, this report preserves the surveys distinction between the racial classification and the identification of Hispanic origin. In other words, a householder identifying herself as black (in response to the question about race) and of Hispanic origin (in response to a separate question on ethnicity) would have her household listed under the racial category African American as well as the ethnic category Hispanic. For some 21.8 percent of h o u s e h o l d s , or 10,480 of the 48,070 households interviewed in the Computer and Internet Supplement, the Demographic Supplement contains re c o rds for all household members. Only these households, for which complete work disability information is available, have been retained in this analysis. Survey non- response has been observed to vary with age, sex, and racial background. The 3 The stratum and primary sampling unit data necessary for direct estimation of standard errors are not provided in the CPS public use data files. Computer and Internet Use Among People With Disabilities 5 Of the 20.9 million Americans aged 15 and over with work disabilities (see above for definition), 5.0 million have computers at home (Table A). Less than half of this group, 2.4 million people, have access to the Internet via their home computer, whether or not they choose to take advantage of it. Some 1.5 million actually use the Internet at home; 2.1 million people with disabilities make use of the Internet either at home or on some other computer. As shown in Figure 1, people with disabilities a re less than half as likely as their non- disabled counterparts to have access to a computer at home (23.9 vs. 51.7 percent). The gap in Internet access is even more striking: Almost three times as many people without disabilities have the ability to connect to the Internet at home as those with disabilities 31.1 versus 11.4 perc e n t . Whether through a home computer or one at work, at school, or in a library, people with disabil ities are far less likely than those without disabilities to make use of the Internet. Only one- tenth (9.9 percent) of people with disabilities connect to the Internet, compared to almost four- tenths (38.1 percent) of those without disabilities. When they do use the Internet, it is likely to be done at home (7.2 p e rcent use the Internet at home, compared to 25.9 p e rcent of those without disabilities). Internet use away from home is much less common for those with disabilities, in part because most people with work disabilities are not employed: Only 3.9 percent of those with disabilities use the Internet outside of the home, compared to 20.6 percent of their non- disabled counterparts. Age and Gender Although the disability population is heavily skewed toward the older ages, and older people ANALYSIS RESULTS Persons aged 15 and above 20,877 100.0 189,954 100.0 Has computer in household 4,983 23.9 98,267 51.7 Has Internet access at home 2,379 11.4 59,132 31.1 Uses Internet 2,076 9.9 72,300 38.1 at home 1,512 7.2 49,126 25.9 elsewhere 821 3.9 39,050 20.6 Persons aged 15 64 12,579 100.0 164,928 100.0 Has computer 4,106 32.6 91,618 55.6 Has Internet access at home 1,991 15.8 55,903 33.9 Uses Internet 1,896 15.1 69,702 42.3 Persons aged 65 and above 8,289 100.0 23,973 100.0 Has computer 877 10.6 6,056 25.3 Has Internet access at home 388 4.7 2,944 12.3 Uses Internet 180 * 2.2 * 2,134 8.9 Table A. Computer ownership and Internet use, by disability status and age group, ages 15 and over. Source: Current Population Survey, 1998 Computer and Internet Use Supplement and 1999 Annual Demographic Supplement Difference in rates between populations with and without work disability is statistically significant at the 95% confidence level or better. *Estimate has low statistical reliability (standard error exceeds 30 percent of estimate). Work disability No disability Number (1000s) % Number (1000s) % Disability Statistics Report 13 6 are less likely to use new technologies, the abovementioned gaps are not accounted for by differences in age. As Figure 2 shows, significant diff erences remain in rates of computer ownership, Internet access, and Internet use for both the non- elderly (ages 15 64) and elderly (65 and above) populations. Only one- third (32.6 percent) of non- elderly persons with work disabilities have computers in their homes, comp ared to more than half (55.6 percent) of those without disabilities. Once again, only about half of those computer- owners with disabilities can access the Internet 15.8 percent of the disability population, compared to 33.9 percent of the non- disabled. And the ratio of Internet use is nearly 3 to 1: 42.3 percent of people without disabilities use the Internet, compared to only 15.1 percent of those with disabilities. Among the elderly, only one- quarter (25.3 percent) of those without disabilities have computers, but a still smaller fraction only one- tenth, or 10.6 percent of those with disabilities have them. Internet access is available for about half of computer owners in each group (12.3 percent of non disabled and 4.7 percent of those with disabilities). Although actual use of the Internet is rare among the elderly, it is far higher for those without disabilities (8.9 percent) than for those with (2.2 perce nt). For the population as a whole, the gender gap in computer ownership and Internet use is statistically significant but surprisingly small. Just over half (51.6 percent) of men and just under half (48.7 percent) of women have access to a computer at home; one- third (33.3 percent) of men and just under a third (30.5 percent) of women use the Internet. Among the population with work disabilities, there are no statistically significant gender gaps (Table B). The gaps between those with Figure 1. Computer ownership and Internet use, by disability status. 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Work disability 23.9 11.4 9.9 No disability 51.7 31.1 38.1 Has computer in household Has Internet access at home Uses Internet Figure 2. Computer ownership and Internet use, by age group and disability status. 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Work disability 32.6 15.8 15.1 10.6 4.7 2.2 No disability 55.6 33.9 42.3 25.3 12.3 8.9 Has computer Has Internet access at home Uses Internet Has computer Has Internet access at home Uses Internet NON- ELDERLY ELDERLY No disability No disability Computer and Internet Use Among People With Disabilities 7 Gender Male 9,587 2,383 24.9 1,056 11.0 92,105 49,040 53.2 36,942 40.1 Female 11,289 2,600 23.0 1,020 9.0 97,849 49,227 50.3 35,358 36.1 Employment status (ages 18 64 only) Employed 3,351 1,427 42.6 885 26.4 124,001 70,547 56.9 54,621 44.0 Not employed 9,024 2,608 28.9 970 10.8 29,445 13,786 46.8 8,914 30.3 Educational attainment Not high school grad 7,461 949 12.7 179 * 2.4 * 37,520 12,949 34.5 8,457 22.5 High school grad 11,418 3,105 27.2 1,294 11.3 108,779 53,267 49.0 35,957 33.1 College grad 1,998 929 46.5 604 30.2 43,655 32,051 73.4 27,885 63.9 Family income Less than $20,000 8,614 950 11.0 424 4.9 28,557 6,326 22.2 5,419 19.0 $20,000 or more 8,512 3,403 40.0 1,417 16.6 132,451 81,042 61.2 59,916 45.2 Difference in rates between households with and without work disability is statistically significant at the 95% confidence level or better. *Estimate has low statistical reliability (standard error exceeds 30 percent of estimate). Uses Internet Number (1000s) % No work disability % % Total population Total population Computer in household Computer in household Number (1000s) Number (1000s) Table B. Computer ownership and Internet use, by disability status, gender, employment status, educational attainment, and family income, ages 15 and over. Source: Current Population Survey, 1998 Computer and Internet Use Supplement and 1999 Annual Demographic Supplement. Uses Internet Number (1000s) % With work disability Number (1000s) Number (1000s) Figure 3. Computer and Internet use, by disability and employment status, ages 18 64. 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Work disability 42.6 28.9 26.4 10.8 No disability 56.9 46.8 44.0 30.3 Employed Not employed Employed Not employed HAS COMPUTER USES INTERNET No disability Figure 4. Computer and Internet use, by disability status and educational attainment, ages 15 and over. 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Work disability 12.7 27.2 46.5 2.4 11.3 30.2 No disability 34.5 49.0 73.4 22.5 33.1 63.9 Not high school grad High school grad College grad Not high school grad High school grad College grad HAS COMPUTER USES INTERNET Disability Statistics Report 13 8 and without disabilities remain large and significant for both sexes, however. For example, 24.9 p e rcent of men with disabilities own computers, c o m p a red to 53.2 percent without; 23.0 percent of women with disabilities own computers, versus 50.3 percent without. Employment Status For working- age adults, having a job can make it financially feasible to buy a computer; often, on- the- job access to computers and the Internet is also provided, along with training in how to use them. It is not surprising, there f o re, that people with and without work disabilities are more likely to have computers and use the Internet if they are employed than if they are not (Figure 3 and Table B). But even when they do have jobs, people with disabilities are significantly less likely to gain access to these new technologies: A m o n g employed people with work disabilities, 42.6 percent have computers and 26.4 percent use the Internet, compared to 56.9 and 44.0 percent of their non- disabled counterparts. All around, rates are significantly lower among those without jobs: Only three- tenths (28.9 percent) of those with disabilities have computers, and only about one- tenth (10.8 percent) use the Internet. Educational Attainment People who are well educated are far more like ly to have the skills, not to mention the financial re s o u rces, necessary to buy and use computer techn o l o g y. But re g a rdless of the level of educational attainment, people with disabilities have much lower rates of computer ownership and Internet use than their non- disabled peers (Figure 4). Only one- eighth (12.7 percent) of people with disabilities who have not graduated from high school own computers. This figure compares with o n e - t h i rd (34.5 percent) of non- high- school- graduates without disabilities, almost half (46.5 perc e n t ) of college graduates w i t h disabilities, and thre e quarters (73.4 percent) of college graduates without d i s a b i l i t i e s . Even more striking is the fact that only 2.4 percent of people with disabilities who lack high school diplomas use the Internet. Those without disabilities are almost 10 times as likely to connect (22.5 percent), and those with disabilities who have college degrees are still more likely (30.2 perc e n t ) . But even this last group has less than half the likelihood of Internet use as college graduates without disabilities, almost two- thirds (63.9 percent) of whom are Internet users. Family Income Half (50.3 percent) of people with work disabilities have family incomes of under $20,000 per y e a r. For this group, buying a computer and paying the monthly fees of an Internet service p rovider may seem like a frivolous expense in relation to the basic necessities of life. Low- income No disability Computer and Internet Use Among People With Disabilities 9 All households 17,709 4,298 24.3 2,144 12.1 86,503 41,179 47.6 24,772 28.6 Race White 14,297 3,833 26.8 1,905 13.3 73,133 36,693 50.2 22,454 30.7 African American 2,910 311 10.7 141 4.8 9,879 2,602 26.3 1,130 11.4 Native American 208 43 * 20.7 * 41 * 19.5 * 583 228 39.1 143 24.6 Asian/ Pacific Isl. 294 111 37.8 58 * 19.7 * 2,909 1,656 56.9 1,045 35.9 Ethnicity Hispanic 1,257 239 19.0 106 * 8.5 * 6,986 2,282 32.7 1,018 14.6 Non- Hispanic 16,452 4,059 24.7 2,038 12.4 79,517 38,897 48.9 23,755 29.9 * Estimate has low statistical reliability (standard error exceeds 30 percent of estimate). With work disability No work disability Total households Number (1000s) Number (1000s) % Number (1000s) % Computer in household Household has Internet access Rate is significantly different from that of whites (for racial groups) or non- Hispanics (for Hispanics) at the 95% confidence level or better. % Household has Internet access Table C. Household computer and Internet access, by race, ethnicity, and disability status of household members. Difference in rates between households with and without work disability is statistically significant at the 95% confidence level or better. Source: Current Population Survey, 1998 Computer and Internet Use Supplement and 1999 Annual Demographic Supplement Note: A household is classified as having a work disability if any member has a work disability. Race and ethnicity are those of the first person listed in the survey roster, generally the person in whose name the home is owned or rented. Households of Hispanic ethnicity are also included in the appropriate racial categories. Total households Number (1000s) Number (1000s) % Computer in household Number (1000s) Figure 5. Computer and Internet use, by disability status and family income, ages 15 and over. 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Work disability 11.0 40.0 4.9 16.6 No disability 22.2 61.2 19.0 45.2 Less than $20,000 $20,000 or more Less than $20,000 $20,000 or more HAS COMPUTER USES INTERNET No disability Disability Statistics Report 13 10 people with and without disabilities own computers and use the Internet at rates much lower than those of their more financially comfortable counterparts (Figure 5). In both income categories, people with disabilities are significantly less likely to own computers: half as likely for the low- income group (11.0 percent vs. 22.2 percent), and two- thirds as likely for the higher- income group (40.0 vs. 61.2 perc e n t ) . Use of the Internet is one- quarter as likely among the low- income group (4.9 percent for those with disabilities vs. 19.0 percent for those without) and just over one- third as likely for the higher- i n c o m e g roup (16.6 percent vs. 45.2 perc e n t ) . Race and Ethnicity Table C and Figure 6 present statistics on h o u s e h o l d computer ownership and Internet access, broken down into racial and ethnic categories (see Data S o u rce and Methods for details on racial and ethnic classification). Households are classified as having work disabilities if one or more members of the household have a work disability. Within each racial and ethnic group, the rate of computer ownership is much lower when there is a disability present in the household than when there is not. 4 Among white households, those with disabilities are about half as likely to own computers as are those without (26.8 vs. 50.2 percent). Among African American households, only one- tenth (10.7 percent) of those with disabilities have computers, compared to one- quarter (26.3 percent) of households having no members with disabilities. Some 37.8 percent of Asian and Pacific Islander households with disabilities have computers, compared to 56.9 percent of those without disabilities. And among Hispanic households, 19.0 percent of those with disabilities have computers, versus 32.7 percent of those with no disability. T h e re are also large gaps in Internet access within the racial categories. 5 A c ross the board , households having members with work disabilities a re roughly half as likely to be connected to the Internet as those without disabled members (for white households, 13.3 vs. 30.7 percent; for black households, 4.8 vs. 11.4 percent; for A s i a n / P a c i f i c Islander households, 19.7 vs. 35.9 perc e n t ) . Among those households having members with work disabilities, most of the diff e rences in rates between racial and ethnic groups are not statistically significant. But one set of diff e rences is significant, and it bears pointing out: A m o n g households with work disabilities, A f r i c a n Figure 6. Household computer ownership and Internet access, by race/ ethnicity and disability status of household members. 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Work disability 26.8 10.7 37.8 19.0 13.3 4.8 19.7 8.5 No work disability 50.2 26.3 56.9 32.7 30.7 11.4 35.9 14.6 White African American Asian/ Pacific Islander Hispanic White African American Asian/ Pacific Islander Hispanic HAS COMPUTER HAS INTERNET ACCESS 4 For Native Americans, the gaps in computer ownership and Internet access are not statistically significant and have not been shown in Figure 6. 5 Among people of Hispanic origin, the difference in Internet access rates is not statistically significant. No work disability Computer and Internet Use Among People With Disabilities 11 American households are much less likely than white households to have a computer (10.7 vs. 26.8 p e rcent) or have access to the Internet (4.8 vs. 13.3 p e rc e n t ) . It is also worth noting that the rates for white households with disabilities (26.8 percent of which have computers and 13.3 percent of which have access to the Internet) are roughly equal to those of African American households without disabilities (26.3 and 11.4 percent, respectively). Thus, in comparing these populations, disability and race can be seen to be equally significant factors in determining the households likelihood of exposure to computer technology. Reasons for Internet Use By far the most common reasons that people with disabilities cite for using the Internet are send ing and receiving electronic mail (1.4 million people, or 67.1 percent of the 2.1 million Internet users) and searching for information (1.3 million, or 62.8 percent; see Table D). These are also the two topranked reasons for Internet use among people without disabilities. F o u r- tenths (39.0 percent) of Internet users with disabilities read the news online, check the weather forecast, or obtain sports scores. Threetenths (29.3 percent) take courses over the Internet or use online resources to help with schoolwork. One- quarter (26.2 percent) of Internet users with disabilities use the Internet for job- related tasks, a significantly lower figure than the 43.1 percent of Internet users without disabilities, who are more likely to have jobs. One- sixth (17.0 percent) use the Internet for shopping, paying bills, or other commercial activities, and 15.9 percent use it to look for employment opportunities. All Internet users 2,076 100.0 72,300 100.0 Electronic mail 1,393 67.1 54,335 75.2 Search for info. 1,304 62.8 46,466 64.3 News, weather, sports 810 39.0 32,529 45.0 Courses, schoolwork 608 29.3 25,456 35.2 Job- related tasks 543 26.2 31,182 43.1 Shop, pay bills, etc. 353 17.0 16,255 22.5 Search for jobs 330 15.9 12,066 16.7 Other 498 24.0 13,075 18.1 Table D. Reasons for using the Internet, by disability status, ages 15 and over. Source: Current Population Survey, 1998 Computer and Internet Use Supplement and 1999 Annual Demographic Supplement Number (1000s) % Number (1000s) % Work disability No disability Disability Statistics Report 13 12 Computer and Internet Use Among People With Disabilities 13 People with disabilities are perhaps the single segment of society with the most to gain from the new technologies of the electronic age. Yet they have among the lowest rates of use of these technologies. As a result, the potential benefits of computers and the Internet to the disability community are a long way from being realized. The problem is largely one of access. Many people with disabilities are poor and can little a ff o rd a computer capable of navigating the Internet, the specialized software they might need in order to adapt it to their needs, and the monthly charges imposed for access to the Internet. Many people with disabilities, whether elderly or not, lack an awareness of the potential benefits of this technology, an understanding that, for themselves especially, a computer and an Internet connection could become not a toy, but an important tool with which to gain greater independence and social integration. The advent of lower- cost computing including the free computers that come with an extended subscription to an Internet service provider may help to make this technology more available. Simpler user interfaces, which would encourage use by people who are less comfortable with the technology, might also help people with disabilities to overcome any resistance they might have to exploring the Internet. But it seems clear that, in order to clarify the benefits that this technology can offer to the population with disabilities, a concerted program of education will be needed, along with training and support in the use of the hardware and software, before significant progress is made in closing the enormous gaps in technology access that have been identified in this report. CONCLUSIONS REFERENCES B u reau of the Census (1999). Source and Accuracy Statement for the December 1998 CPS Microdata File for Internet and Computer Use in the U. S. Available online at: h t t p : / / w w w. b l s . c e n s u s . g o v / c p s / c o m p u t e r / 1 9 9 8 / s s r c a c c . h t m . National Telecommunications and Information Administration (1999). Falling Through the Net: Defining the Digital Divide. Washington, DC: U. S. Department of Commerce, National Telecommunications and Information Administration. Available online at: h t t p : / / w w w. n t i a . d o c . g o v / n t i a h o m e / d i g i t a l d i v i d e / i n d e x . h t m l ---------- End of Document