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

Monday, February 15, 2010

New Tool for Caregivers

If you are one of the over 50 million Americans who provides care for a loved one, you will want to check out a new online tool. It is still in beta stage, so you can also be one of the early testers of this tool. The founders are inviting participation and feedback.

You can find the tools at Patientsandfamilies.com, a hub designed to provide caregivers a centralized place for information and communication. As elders and others who need care become the center of a family dynamic, someone generally emerges as the lead caregiver. However, it is not uncommon that other family members and friends around the country (and perhaps the globe) want and need to be part of the communication process and decision-making. Calls, emails and potentially confusing interactions can drain a family quickly of all resolve to provide care and be as focused on their loved one as possible.

Patients and Families has a secure network for communications among family members, physicians, therapists and others involved in the caregiving process. It is easy to post appointments, updates, details about medications and whatever else feels important at the time.

Watch a video tour that offers a day-in-the-life example.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Multitasking Has Its Detractors

Among the many wonders of the significant technological shift in the 1990s was the idea that we could “save time.” Having instant access to phones, email and information, many declared, would give us more time to do the “important things.” Some even suggested it was better for your brain!

Now that technology has taken us to a place never before known (e.g., 74% of Americans use the internet, over 80% own or use cell phones), science is taking a closer look at what effects multitasking (or task switching) has on the human brain and life in general. A study in New York City revealed that over 89% of those in the city use cell phones.

This past Sunday’s New York Times (January 17, 2010) reported on just how risky it is to walk and use your cell phone at the same time. The article quotes a study at Ohio State University that showed a doubling of emergency room visits resulting from walking and simultaneously talking on the cell phone in 2008 over 2007, which also doubled over 2006. The study suggests the actual numbers of incidents is higher than the reported 1000 emergency room visits because many people may not have suffered injuries requiring treatment. Over half the injuries reported happened among those between the ages of 16 and 20. One quarter of injuries happened to people 41 to 60 years old.

And we know all too well the dangers of cell phone use while driving as more and more states limit and outlaw cell phones while behind the wheel.

A significant report published in The New Atlantis: A Journal of Science and Technology, in 2008 uncovered the myth of multitasking, summarizing a number of studies conducted since 2000. One of the more entertaining, but alarming quotes in the article is attributed to a study done at the Institute of Psychiatry in London, funded by Hewlett-Packard on email and cell phone use in the workplace. “Workers distracted by email and phone calls suffer a fall in IQ more than twice that found in marijuana smokers.” Go figure! I was impressed with the range of research on multitasking and that most of it underscores the downsides.

I worked with someone once who decried the focus on multitasking that had “taken over reason,” she claimed. “If I need to work on two things at once, I won’t do either of them well. It’s your choice,” she said to me, her boss at the time. I guess now she was right!

Do your experiences with multitasking support the detractors or the supporters? Post your thoughts in a comment below.