Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts

Wednesday, 11 November 2015

Take The Pressure Off With Tech Aides at Home

Guest Post by Maria Ramos

As life expectancies have grown over the years, many people are living longer than ever before. This is undoubtedly a good thing, but it places certain stresses on those who care for the elderly. Besides taking care of an aged parent or loved one, many individuals provide care for disabled or otherwise incapacitated adults and children. All told, approximately 39 percent of adults in the United States are caregivers, according to research by Pew. They devote their time, energy and sometimes significant amounts of money to ensure the wellbeing of their loved ones. November is National Family Caregivers Month and this year's theme is “Respite: Care for Caregivers.” It's only fitting, therefore, to examine the ways in which caregiving can be made easier especially in light of the advanced technologies that are available today.



Those who are unable to properly care for themselves are subject to sudden emergencies, which leave caregivers worried and feeling helpless. With personal emergency response equipment, emergency services can be summoned directly by the individual in question merely by pressing a button. Lifeline, Rescue Alert and several other firms offer this type of product, which typically requires a monthly subscription. With these systems, seniors can stay at home by themselves yet still avail themselves of help when it's required.

The elderly and those with reduced mobility stand to gain enormously from developments in the field of home automation. Adjusting thermostats, turning lights on and off and operating home appliances all pose problems for those who have difficulty taking proper care of themselves. By letting sophisticated machines do the tough work, caregivers don't have to personally ensure that temperatures are okay, lighting is adequate and the proper security precautions are employed. Indeed, with the right automated security system, the authorities can be alerted whenever there's a break-in or other worrisome event, and these systems can be controlled by senior citizens without their having to get up and move around.

One of the most difficult tasks facing caregivers is making sure that the right medications are taken at the appropriate times and frequencies. Electronic pillboxes can make this chore simple by automatically dispensing drugs, tracking consumption and alerting caregivers when a dose has been missed. Tabsafe and MedMinder are two such solutions that allow for the review of past information using web interfaces, making things easier for patient and caregiver alike.



With the use of the right sensors, keeping tabs on family members from afar becomes simple. Motion sensing equipment can let you know if your loved one has left the house or what room he or she is in. Because you can access this information from your cellphone or other mobile device, there's no need to physically go to the senior's home as often to make sure that everything is okay. Other sensors can be attached to items that tend to get lost, like keys or TV remotes. When an object is missing, the user can press a button to have the sensor beep, making it easy to locate.

Certain wearable devices contain GPS equipment that will inform you through text message or email when the wearer leaves specific geographical locations. MedicAlert and the Alzheimer's Association have joined forces to offer a service whereby the caregivers of dementia sufferers are automatically notified if the system determines that the patient is wandering around.

Using modern technology for elderly care provides a double boon: Not only is the senior's life made easier, but caregivers can accomplish their duties without spending as much time on them. Now that routine chores can be automatically handled, patients and caregivers can devote their energies to more productive and enjoyable pursuits, enhancing quality of life for everyone concerned.

Maria is a freelance writer currently living in Chicago. She has a Bachelor of Arts degree in English from the University of Illinois at Chicago with a minor in Communication. She blogs about environmentally friendly tips, technological advancements, and healthy active lifestyles.



Saturday, 18 July 2015

The White House Conference on Aging - How Technology Will Shape Our Future



Guest Post by Maria Ramos



In 2011, the first baby boomers turned 65. Every day since then, thousands more reach retirement age. By 2050, 42% of American households will include someone over the age of 70. The recent once-every-ten-years White House Conference on Aging took place on July 13th and could not have come at a better time. In addition to an address by President Obama, the conference discussed caregiving, financial security, elder justice and introduced new and promising innovations in technology that will allow seniors and their caregivers more ease, more safety and most importantly, more independence.

Technology was front and center as the White House offered a live stream of the conference to anyone who was interested in attending but could not travel to Washington D.C. This set the tone for what an important role technology will play in the lives of those who are of retirement age. From medication management to personalized home security to 24/7 access to in-home health monitoring, technology is opening new doors for seniors and caregivers that is becoming more and more necessary as life-expectancy extends, and the gap between the generations narrows.

For instance, a new development in medication management includes pill packets that are pre-measured and personalized with instructions for each dose. For those who take, or administer multiple medications daily, it’s a great way to save on time and cut down on missed doses. In addition, there are mobile apps and other technology that monitor when a patient takes their medications, which is extremely helpful for Alzheimer’s patients and their caregivers. Digital health services from home security systems can help alert family members or caregivers, via a mobile app, of all of their loved one’s activities — eating, bathing, sleeping, medication and whether or not they leave the house. This ensures the patient’s safety, while allowing them to stay in the comfort of their own home and maintain a certain level of independence.

Of course, costs are always a consideration, especially when it comes to senior care. President Obama addressed how Medicare, Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act have assisted with the rising costs of long-term care. The White House has also called on the Department of Labor to forgo profits in the best interests of retiring employees. In addition, President Obama tasked the Department of Agriculture to grant greater accessibility to affordable nutrition and the Department of Housing to ensure that it reviews its policies on HUD access. The Department of Justice was also tasked to review the VOCA Victim Assistance Guidelines in order to make certain that the support of social and legal services to elder victims of abuse, financial exploitation, fraud, and neglect is made available.

These innovations in technology, combined with government cooperation, open up possibilities and opportunities that will benefit seniors and their caregivers for generations to come. Utilizing technology to ensure that our aging seniors can maintain their independence is the greatest way we can give back to them. It’s never too early to plan for your loved ones, or for yourself.  And, as options in the public and private sectors continue to grow, our golden years couldn’t look brighter.

Maria Ramos is a writer interested in aging and technology, comic books, cycling, and horror films.   She currently lives in Chicago with her two pet turtles, Franklin and Roy. You can follow her on Twitter @MariaRamos1889.


Saturday, 14 April 2012

Then and Now, Remembering When Nick Was Small

Last week I had the pleasure of speaking to parents at the Holland Bloorview Kids' Rehabilitation Hospital in Toronto. The building is new with a welcoming, light and homey feel to it - certainly very different from the old Hugh MacMillan Rehab Centre that used to stand in its place. Nicholas and I went to Toronto when he was three and four years old. There, we had his first psychology assessment, seating clinics (we received his first wheelchair) and inpatient stays for gastro consultations that came through Sick Kids' Hospital. I walked in to the new centre and was met immediately by a delighted squeal of recognition - it was the doyenne of all community connectors, Louise Kinross, chief of communications for the hospital and editor of "Bloom", a parent magazine about all things disability. Louise and I had been emailing each other for months and we felt like fast friends, but we'd never met in person. We hugged and began to tour me around the facility. My eyes fell upon a bench, placed in front of a window to allow parents to view their children having aqua therapy in the pool below. All the parents were leaning forward, pointing and chatting quietly. I listened for a moment as they compared challenges and triumphs. I was flooded with memories.

It's been a while since we did therapy with Nicholas. We haven't given up hope for change in his abilities, but we accept who he is and we no longer feel the urgency of that desperate love of parents for their young children - children who hold so much potential for improvement. We are in the middle age of our parenting. But seeing the other families and hearing their stories at my talk, I wondered whether we should be more hopeful for change in Nicholas. I looked at the weary faces of parents, young and old and I thought about our life. There, at Holland Bloorview, there was so much help - so much hope for change. Had I given up on all that?

The morning that I packed and prepared for my drive back to Ottawa, Louise met me and said, "Before you go, I want you to meet Dr. Tom Chau. He's the Director of Research here. Have you heard of him?" I answered that yes, I had heard of his amazing work in using movement and music to facilitate communication in children with very severe impairments. Louise guided me up to the fourth floor and knocked gently on Dr. Chau's office door. A good looking, slim and well-dressed Asian man introduced himself and Louise left us to chat about communication technology. The doctor explained about some of his new inventions and asked about Nicholas. I hesitated a little - did I want to enter this territory of hope, therapy and worry again? I breathed and began to tell Nick's communication story of computer switches, auditory scanning, coded verbal and non-verbal messaging that is his way of talking. Dr. Chau nodded and I made a decision. "Can you help Nicholas?" I asked. "Of course, he is 23 years old and you work with children", I added perhaps too quickly. "Of course we can help Nicholas", the doctor said. We work with all ages when we are researching new technologies." Then he showed me a video of a young man, very like Nicholas, who used his voice to hum in order to prompt the computer to speak his chosen words. A kind of necklace called "The Hummer" sensed the tonal vocalizations of the young man and turned these sounds into computer messages. My eyes widened and I said quietly, "Could Nick wear that and use it in bed and in his wheelchair?" I asked. "Yes, sure", Dr. Chau replied. I began to feel the old excitement of potential and positive change. "I'll write to you and we are definitely interested. Thank you so much!"

I went to Holland Bloorview to tell our family story. People came to hear me and to learn. But it was me who learned from the families there - I tasted hope and remembered.

Friday, 10 June 2011

Innovation and Ethics - Across Sectors

On the morning of June 6, 2011, I gave the festival keynote address at the FICCDAT conference in Toronto (the Festival of Conferences on Caregiving, Disability, Ageing and Technology). Here is my speech on INNOVATION AND ETHICS.

Recently, I heard the British social innovator Charles Leadbeater say “Your vantage point determines everything you see”. Let me begin by telling you about my vantage point.
My name is Donna Thomson and I am a mother and an author. This is my family – my daughter Natalie is 19 and a student at the University of Toronto. My husband, Jim Wright, is the High Commissioner for Canada in the United Kingdom. My son Nicholas is 22 and is disabled with cerebral palsy. Until Nicholas was 18, I provided him with almost all of his nursing care. Thanks to innovations such as a computerised spinal cord pain pump, gastrostomy feeding tube, oxygen saturation monitors together with the loving care of our family, Nicholas has survived. But the social innovation required to sustain Nick in the community has not kept pace with the medical breakthroughs that keep him alive. Nicholas is so high-tech and high maintenance now, that no existing policy, programme or service can easily meet his needs. My vantage point has led me to reflect on how we might nurture innovation across the sectors of science, community and family.
Nicholas is representative of the first generation of people with disabilities who will outlive their predicted lifespan. Many members of this cohort will even outlive their parents.
But it’s not only people with disabilities who are surviving – the average life expectancy in Canada is climbing. Babies born today can expect to live nearly 81 years. My mother who lives in Montreal is 89. Of course at that age, she has health problems – in fact she was in the hospital last week, but thankfully, she is better now and home again in her apartment.
The theme of this conference is "Living Longer and Living Better". I believe that we can do that if we change our collective vantage point.
Of course experiences can rearrange our vantage points, but so can ideas. The idea that changed my vantage point was something called “The Capability Approach”. Amartya Sen won the Nobel Prize for Economics in 1998 and the Capability Approach is his great idea for rearranging the economist’s vantage point when looking at extreme poverty. He decided that household income and GDP were poor indicators of human and even economic wellbeing. Rather, he proposes that we need to examine whether people have a life that they value and have reason to value. Money is just one factor in a good life. But there are others equally valuable – such as loving relationships and whether or not someone has the resources to convert money into good living, as in the case of disability or old age.
Looking at the entire range of possibilities for flourishing within circumstances of adversity was what won Sen the Nobel prize. He positions the idea of freedom to imagine, to choose and to act at the heart of his definition of a decent human life.
Through the generosity of the Printing House Charitable Office and McArthur and Company Publishing, you will find a copy of my book “The Four Walls of My Freedom” in your FICCDAT conference pack. When Nicholas was growing up and battling the effects of severe cerebral palsy, I believed that our struggles with Nick’s disability were private and of no concern or interest to anyone outside our family and friends. But Amartya Sen’s Capability Approach offered me a lens to evaluate my family experience with adversity so that it had relevance to anyone concerned with freedom, active citizenship and caring societies. The research and reflections for my book led me to the conclusion that innovations, policies, programmes and services for those with care needs should be designed according to the principles of “least restrictive and most supportive”.
So, in the context of my family experience, what does an innovation for our community designed on the principle of “least restrictive, most supportive”, look like? Well, I think it looks like an Ipad application. Nicholas uses a communication app called Proloquo2Go.
This is an app that was designed by someone with expertise in both computer programming and speech language pathology. But apps are designed to be whatever the user wants them to be.
The programme is totally customisable, which is least restrictive. But it has open source information sharing about its infinite number of uses and malleability which is most supportive. Inventors of Ipad applications often have no clear idea how their programmes will be used. The developer devolves creative ownership to the user so that ongoing problem solving can occur in a way that is highly responsive and personalised. In social care terms, I do not want a day programme for my son that runs only on Wednesday mornings, for example. Nicholas is bedridden, so couldn't access the programme anyway. For us, personal budgets or care vouchers would offer the flexible benefits of an "app".
Fundamental change, or radical innovation, nearly always necessitates the turning upside-down of power relationships. The idea of the consumer as co-collaborator is radical in itself. The former Shell scenario planner, now turned social innovator, Adam Kahane, wrote a book called “Love and Power”. Kahane defines power as the drive toward self-realization. And he defines love as the drive toward unity. Deep change, he maintains, calls for a balance of these two forces because systems based on just one of those forces alone will result in stagnation. And this carries the risk of the overall failure to respond to the chaotic changes that are the natural fallout of human relationships.
The impetus required to reinvent the most deeply embedded habits is called for when the results of ineffective systems are a great enough irritant to the majority, that a general consensus to throw in the towel ensues.
This happened in Anchorage Alaska when Dr. Doug Eby and his colleagues became so frustrated with the poor outcomes of traditional western medicine that they invented an entirely new blueprint for delivering healthcare.
The NUKA Model of Care was born out of the realization that the “owner/users”, as their patients are called, held a good deal of the power for achieving decent health outcomes. Particularly in the case of chronic care, it is often patients who decide whether or not to fill a prescription or to take a full course of medical treatment. The NUKA model of care retained a traditional model of ICU care, because in that setting, patients need systems to take over. But Dr. Eby describes the design of traditional health care delivery for chronic conditions as akin to throwing a stone at a target on the wall. In the messy business of dealing with people, he says, it is not a stone you are throwing at the target, but a bird. No matter how hard you throw that bird at the target, it still may veer off in another direction before it hits the wall. Systems that are rooted in the respect for freedom, yet offer support for our failings or changed trajectories, will result in better outcomes.
So says Dr. Eby and he has the empirical data to prove it.
Thirty years ago, a group of aging parents from Vancouver began to worry about who would love and care for their adult children with disabilities after the parents died. These mothers and fathers felt desperate at first. Knowing that their offspring were part of the first generation of children with disabilities who would likely outlive their parents, this group decided to do something very radical. They gave up on the idea that government ALONE could be relied upon to love and care for their children. This realisation proved to be a watershed. Now, they had a blank slate with no rigid assumptions in their future planning. They changed their vantage point. They asked “What IS a good life?” This group decided that the key to a good life was loving relationships.
The next task was to build an organization that could broker, sustain and coordinate loving relationships that would endure for their children’s lifetime. Everyone in the group agreed that their children would be safe with a circle of friends and family who truly loved and cared for them. Planned Lifetime Advocacy Networks, or PLAN, was born. Personal support networks consisting of family, friends, neighbours and community members were organized to offer a natural kind of love, friendship and constancy to vulnerable adults.
The network would also assume the advocacy and monitoring role that normally falls to parents.
Groups representing the interests of those with issues related to aging, homelessness, addictions, teen pregnancy, and mental illness began to take notice. They replicated the model of personal support networks for their vulnerable populations. And the unanticipated positive outcomes didn’t stop there.
Social scientists and contemporary anthropologists were noticing a disturbing trend of isolation and loneliness in healthy populations. Isolation is a well documented negative health determinant. Current demographic trends mean that most people today live far away from their extended families. Many people are not acquainted with their neighbours. But those who participate in supporting a vulnerable individual as part of a small group reported feeling happier themselves. They were less isolated and enjoyed a greater sense of meaning in their lives.
Canada is experiencing a climate of reduced budgets and increasing costs in health and social care. At the same time, public servants face a daily imperative for accountability, transparency and results-based management.
I am married to a public servant, so I can attest to that. But fiscal pressure can sometimes provide the impetus for change.
PLAN is a model that provides an opportunity to shift from patient centred care to network centred care - a shift that front line professionals are beginning to realise holds potential to ease pressure on their budgets, by coordinating support for a vulnerable individual in the community. Accountability and transparency are natural outcomes of support networks which consist of people who share objectives that affect someone they love.
In these examples of transformational change, the protagonists followed similar steps. They set aside their assumptions about the status quo and prepared themselves to imagine something different - something better. They rearranged their vantage point in order to generate a new set of fundamental objectives. They aligned with others who shared a vested interest in working to a common purpose. And every participant was considered an equal co-creator, regardless of professional qualification. The umbrella organisation had ultimate responsibility for outcomes, but collaborated with users right up to the management level.
In business terms, all these approaches including the Capability Approach apply the principles of cultural decision-making rather than administrative decision-making.
These models build in the capacity to bend rules in a way that is responsive to the messy and fluid requirements of those living with challenging circumstances. These models build in authentic collaborative relationships across the spectrum of provider and end user because the authors understand the concept of interdependency.
My family uses a wide range of services and innovations. I passionately WANT to collaborate with professionals involved in both my son's and my mother's care. And I am not unique in this regard.
Family members who provide complex care to a loved one develop a myriad of skills and a wealth of knowledge. We want the freedom to use our knowledge and skills LIKE an app - in ways that will give us a life that we value and have reason to value. We want access to innovators so that we can customize our care and support on a continual basis. If we are the bird and we collaborate closely with the person tossing us toward an agreed target on the wall, believe me, we will fly toward that target and we will land there every time if we possibly can.
Most of us here at the FICCDAT Conference represent cultures and societies that do not suffer from widespread extreme poverty.
But that doesn’t mean we don’t have important lessons to learn from the slums of India, the favelas of Brazil or the economists who seek to create better lives for those who are very poor. Necessity is the mother of invention. And the worldwide recession, combined with the demographics of aging and an explosion of technological innovation, provide us the seeds of real, positive change if choose to sow them. And that vantage point is full of hope and possibility.
It is my vantage point. I wish you all a wonderful FICCDAT conference.

Tuesday, 12 April 2011

BIG AIR MAX!

When I wrote a book and it got published and distributed around the world, I had no idea if anyone would read it, much less contact me to tell me their own story of caregiving. Well, I have heard from a number of mothers and fathers of children with disabilities and I am so pleased that our family experience touched a chord with others. One of the readers who took the time and trouble to contact me was the mother of Max Grange from Aspen, Colorado. Max is the same age as Nicholas and has many of the same challenges. When I received the initial handwritten and heartfelt letter from Max's mother along with a photo of the family, I found myself blinking away tears. Not tears of sorrow, oh no. Just a deep recognition of the love between mother, son .... and dog! I could see at once that this happy family enjoyed the same love, support and mutual respect as mine. So, I am proud to share Max's new website. I know that Max would love to be in touch with anyone who would like to know more about adapted skiing, art or any of his other interests. I commend everyone to: BIG AIR MAX!