Guidance on Accessibility
The power of the Web is in its universality. Access by everyone regardless of disability is an essential aspect.
Tim Berners-Lee, W3C Director and inventor of the World Wide Web
Accessibility regulations have been implemented for all public sectors and government bodies since 23 September 2018. These regulations set the direction that all government websites and apps are required to be "perceivable, operable, understandable and robust".
See the NHS "digital service manual" on accessibility and why it matters.
We follow suit at NHS England, building up on government accessibility directives, releasing and maintaining a wide range of NHS services and products, encompassing accessibility standards in each project development's phase:
- product and delivery: including the questions product or delivery managers need to be asking.
- user research: from identifying target groups and accessibility challenges to including users with access needs in research and practicalities like making your research sessions more accessible on the day.
- content: how to write effective, clear content as well as headings, good link names, handling images in content and making multimedia accessible.
- design: it includes, for example, colour contrast, designing new components (only after you've tested existing ones) and handling errors in forms.
- development, including information on how to make your service accessible for those who can’t use a mouse or trackpad and rely on keyboards or joysticks.
- testing: different kinds of testing (user research, manual and automated) and the wide range of things that may need checking.
Find out more on how NHS Digital works on making digital services accessible.
Accessibility and RAP: end user
For the purposes of RAP publications it's important to consider the end user, and how accessible are the design outputs, graphs and charts, documentation and user guidance catering to all audiences and adhering to accessibility standards. Both the government and NHS have released a variety of accessiblity service manuals and posters to support development and design teams on improving services and product accessibility requirements:
GSS accessibility standards for publications
Government accessibility standards
Posters
Accessibility and RAP: analyst
As more and more NHS Digiital RAP pipelines are being published on GitHub, RAP analysts and developers need to consider documentation and user guidance adhering to accessibility practices includes the RAP pipeline itself (e.g. every user can run the pipeline without any hindrances), the public facing repository and its contents, repository documentation (e.g. README, CONTRIBUTING, CODE OF CONDUCT etc.) and other pipeline documentation.
Documentation, page structure design, development and testing
To further cater to all user requirements, here are a few tips on making your repositories more inclusive
External Links Disclaimer
NHS England makes every effort to ensure that external links are accurate, up to date and relevant, however we cannot take responsibility for pages maintained by external providers.
NHS England is not affiliated with any of the websites or companies in the links to external websites.
If you come across any external links that do not work, we would be grateful if you could report them by raising an issue on our RAP Community of Practice GitHub.