Deaf Mental Health 1 / 10What is the main reason standard mental-health services often do not work well for deaf people? Deaf people prefer informal support over professional care Communication barriers and lack of cultural understanding Mental-health systems are designed mainly around spoken interaction Deaf people experience fewer mental-health challenges 2 / 10What makes deaf-friendly therapy different from regular therapy? It focuses on long-term therapy instead of short-term support It adapts therapeutic methods to visual and sign-based communication It uses sign language and visual methods as the main form of communication It avoids the use of interpreters in all situations 3 / 10Why can using an interpreter in therapy sometimes be challenging for deaf clients? Emotional meaning and personal nuance can be harder to express through a third person Interpreters may lack basic language skills Therapy sessions become too structured Interpreters take over the therapist’s role 4 / 10Which factor contributes most to higher rates of anxiety and depression among deaf people in Europe? Genetic differences Limited access to education Communication gaps and social isolation Overuse of digital communication 5 / 10Why are visual tools such as drawings or videos important in deaf-friendly therapy? They help visualise complex ideas and emotions They replace spoken explanations with visual communication They reduce the need for emotional discussion They shorten therapy sessions 6 / 10What most clearly distinguishes Deaf-aware therapists from therapists who only use interpreters? Their ability to work without spoken language Their combined understanding of mental health, sign language, and Deaf culture Their focus on cultural topics rather than therapy goals Their employment in specialised clinics only 7 / 10Which strategy best supports sustainable improvement in deaf mental-health care across Europe? Increasing short-term pilot projects Expanding interpreter availability only Integrating Deaf-friendly approaches into mainstream mental-health systems Shifting responsibility to community organisations 8 / 10Understanding Deaf culture is as important as language access for effective mental-health support. True False 9 / 10Mental-health information in Europe is widely available in sign languages. True False 10 / 10Providing mental-health services in sign language can improve trust and engagement for deaf clients. True False Your score isThe average score is 10% 0% Restart quiz