Saturday, November 15, 2014

Reading Bigger and Bolder

Reading is not what it used to be. And that's true for everyone, not just those former users of Large Print Editions or wide magnifying glasses. 

In the last few years, technology has made reading comfortable. Customizing for your particular needs has become fairly easy. If the usual Times Roman font is getting hard to read, shift to this slightly blacker Georgia font. 

Or just make the type larger. Unlike doing this with a magnifying glass, there is no need to reposition as you scan a wide text column: the text will be "reflowed" into a narrow column with fewer words on each line. See the three examples below; each has a different column width.

If you've tried reading anything long on a computer screen, and found it tiring and fussy, give these devices a try. Serious design work has been done.



Here are the three "devices" that I will use for examples, all displaying the same Kindle book. The iPhone 6 is 5.5 inches tall, the typical height of a paperback.


Kindle Paperwhite ($100 vicinity, Amazon.com), my current (Nov 2014) favorite for effortless reading. Better yet is said to be the Kindle Voyage ($200.)
  • It mimics the printed book page, except that you can change the type size, type face, line spacing, and even the color of the "paper" should you find white too bright. The video shows how to change things.


  • You can read outside in a lawn chair in bright daylight with no strain. If thoroughly engrossed, you may discover that the sun has set, yet the clever screen lighting gradually compensated for the dusk. Unlike reading lights, it won't keep your spouse awake after midnight, either.
  • It is really lightweight and can be held in one hand for a long time. It's a touchscreen, so a light finger tap (not a push) "turns the page." On the Voyage, a little squeeze also works, true one-handed reading and page turning.
  • If the downloaded book has color photos, it will show them in grayscale. 
  • Most people download books via wi-fi; if you don't have such a setup, just ask around in the lobby for the password to the building's guest network. Or you can pay an extra $70 for the Kindle model with a free-for-life wireless channel to Amazon; it works without a login, wherever there is a cell phone signal, so even less fiddling.
  • Every week or so, you plug it into any USB port and charge it for a few hours. Turn off the wi-fi or wireless data and it will last four weeks (six for the Voyage).
  • Shopping for books with Kindle editions can be done with the device, but it is faster to use a web browser at the Kindle Store. Most new books seem to come in a Kindle edition, usually for half the price.
  • You can check out e-books from the Seattle Public Library on-line and read them on any Kindle device.
  • Great for ordinary books; not so good for textbooks or newspapers.
Reading via a tablet such as the iPad ($300 up) or the Kindle Fire. 
  • Good choice for reading digital editions of newspapers and magazines where one scans a lot before settling down. 
  • Color touchscreen, various sizes. Not so good in daylight. 
  • Battery life usually one day. 
  • Heavier, usually a two-handed job but easier page-turning than for a hefty book.
  • There is a Kindle app, and it knows where you left off reading on another Kindle device, making it easy to switch devices.
  • Besides reading, can watch videos, surf the internet, read/send email, play games.
  • Apple makes it difficult to shop the Kindle store via Amazon's app, so use the iPad's web browser. Apple has their own bookstore for a different format of e-books.
Reading on a smartphone such as the iPhone or all the Androids.
  • Just like a small-screen iPad; they often run the same apps. 
  • Except for weight, all iPad comments apply to iPhones and similar smartphones.
  • Since you always have your phone with you, it is just the thing for reading for 15' in waiting rooms or on the bus.
Reading via a web browser, whether on desktop, tablet, laptop, or smartphone.
  • Amazon.com/Kindle will guide you to an app-mimic (Kindle Reader App) so that you can continue reading your book. Or shop for books.
  • NYTimes.com offers several ways (constantly changing) to read the daily paper, including app-like displays that reflow the text at the type size you would prefer. But they often make it difficult to copy-and-paste.
  • Whenever you are reading a story or web page with a lot of ads alongside, look for a Reader View option with the 2.5-bars icon. That may put you back into comfortable reading territory.
That's the ordinary mobile.nytimes.com on my iPhone. Tap a headline and:
 Tap those 2.5 bars in the upper left corner and:


    I use them all. For serious or light reading, I prefer the Kindle. For "morning edition" news, the NYTimes app (app.NYTimes.com). For during-the-day news, www.NYTimes.com. The other national newspapers and channels have their own versions.




Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Skyline's 911 Problem

Why some will not call 911

I was perhaps too brief in my January 2013 memo (21 months ago!) by sticking to what I could document about how we are overusing 911 services. The need for in-apartment consultation is not analogous to the inefficient physician house calls of our youth.

By Skyline offering no intermediate between first aid and lights-and-sirens, we are setting up problems for those who are reluctant to declare an emergency over something strange that isn’t getting better. Such residents would like to talk to someone knowledgeable first.

My mother was such a case at age 92, living independently in Horizon House, when she could not get to sleep because she felt strange. After several hours, she called the front desk and was connected with the night nursing supervisor.

My mother could not really explain what felt wrong and the nurse decided to come take a look. Arriving in three minutes, she soon suspected (correctly) a stroke and called 911, then called me in Phoenix.

I can guarantee you that my mother would never have called 911 and, had she lived here at Skyline under present management, she would have avoided phoning the front desk–knowing that they would automatically call 911 and subject her to the discomfort of transport and long hours in an emergency room. She would have waited until morning when, given how things progressed, she would have been unable to call anyone.

My mother had little experience with emergency rooms, merely a horror of causing people so much trouble (stopping traffic en route, etc.) over what could be flu or an upset stomach. Others of us may have additional reasons, valid or not, for hesitating.

My point is: we need to practice some preventative medicine for the emergency-wary by providing for an in-house consultation. And since there are always RNs on duty in the Terraces, there is really no excuse for not copying the procedures at Horizon House. Nursing supervisors, with more of a roving brief, would be a logical choice for occasional calls, day and night, and would be away from the Terraces for little longer than when taking a coffee break.

There has been a big push to treat stroke symptoms as an emergency, given the first-two-hours window of opportunity for the anticoagulant therapy. But fewer than half the stroke patients are going to have such classic signs as a weak arm or a numb leg. “Feeling funny” is all the others may be able to describe, yet they too need diagnosis and treatment in that two-hour window.

We are going to lose some of them if they cannot talk first to someone who can make the declare-an-emergency decision for them. That’s one of the services that CCRCs ought to be providing via the RNs already on staff. Do not confuse this need with such issues as a drop-in day clinic.

Horizon House, with twice our numbers, averages one such consultation call each day. This is not something that needs an additional FTE and budget line.
—W. H. Calvin
October 10, 2014  X2605, wcalvin@uw.edu
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The first memo:

Short of calling 911, what?
January 2013

The standing policy of Skyline on any urgent medical care is to call 911 and export the problem as quickly as possible.

One sees a similar attitude about helping up someone who has fallen; policy prohibits staff from assisting, even if the person does not appear to be injured.

“Just call 911” is a policy that makes residents wonder if PRCN’s unhelpful attitude isn’t taking corporate risk avoidance too far, and at the expense of residents.

The obvious improvement would be an ability to first call the in-house nurse in non-resuscitation cases. For four years, residents have been asking for a nurse to phone, one who can come to an apartment to assess the situation.

The perennial reply from executive directors is that “the law” or “regulations” make this difficult but that “We will study the situation.” For four years, residents have seen no improvements.

But this is not a problem where staff have to pioneer a better approach. Horizon House manages this quite well and has done so for decades.

The staff’s perennial excuse has caused growing skepticism among residents because advice on implementation and constraints has been only a phone call away or a walk down the street.

Yet there is no progress, year after year. “Not in our lifetime” is becoming the conventional ironic comment.


Is Skyline Overusing 911?

Skyline generates 48% more 911 “Aid Unit” (non-resuscitation) responses per person as does Horizon House. For Medic-level response, 160% more.

Presumably HH’s lower numbers are partly due to problems handled in-house by the HH nurse, ones that didn’t really need a 911 call, transport to a hospital, wasted resources, and a sleepless night.

The Horizon House Nurse Setup
The HH model is also attractive to many. Here are relevant snippets from current Horizon House handouts:

Advanced Registered Nurse Practitioners (ARNPs)-Medical Clinic: A reminder: we have an ARNP on duty in the Clinic, Monday-Friday, 8:30-4:00 pm. Our ARNPs collaborate closely with physicians from different medical clinics including Virginia Mason Internal Medicine, Swedish groups, and the University of Washington.

You are welcome to schedule an appointment with our ARNP if you are not feeling well or are unable to travel out to your primary care office. The ARNP will consult with your physician following your appointment.

The ARNPs are also available to make house-calls to your apartment. Residents may make three free after-hours requests per quarter; $50 per additional call.

Visits to apartments average about one per day. They are typically about falls, trouble breathing, chest pain, confusion and such.

If this is the type of in-house coverage that Tower residents want, they need to insist.
—W. H. Calvin
January 16, 2013, X2605, wcalvin@uw.edu


calls to 911
total
Aid
Medic
%Aid
census
Horizon House HH)
133
104
29
78%
680?
Skyline (SFH)
127
85
42
67%
376
  Tower
     76
  63
     13
  83%
276
  Terraces
     51
  22
     29
  43%
100
Kindred, 1334 Terry, only skilled nursing
45
11
34
25%

Park Shore
71
61
10
86%

Exeter House
54
39
16
72%


Aid Unit” Responses (what in-house nurse consultation should reduce)

In 2013 there were 104 responses to Horizon House and 85 to Skyline (63 Tower plus 22 Terraces). But the Horizon House census is almost twice ours, so Skyline generates 48% more Aid-level calls per person as does Horizon House.

Medic-level responses (true emergencies; unconscious, resuscitation may be needed)

While true resuscitation-style emergencies are not the topic here, some limited insights can be gained from the comparison for Medic-level responses between HH and SFH. One sees that HH is calling in a Medic-level request far less often than does SFH.

HH had 29 Medic requests in 2013, while Tower+Terraces (with half the people) had 42 total. Per resident, SFH is calling in 160% more Medic-level cases than HH.

One obvious interpretation is that the HH nurse can make a better judgment call about declaring an emergency than whoever calls from SFH.


Qualifications to comparisons:
1.       HH census based on approximate number of units plus 25% dual occupancy. SFH census based on 2013 phone book count (Tower) and reported occupancy for Terraces (110 beds total).
2.      HH no longer offers Medicare A beds (typically post-op recovery; they formerly had 18 beds). However, skilled nursing beds are only a fraction of the total SFH census.
3.      The average age of HH residents is higher than at SFH.
4.      The 911 caller may be a nurse (good at distinguishing between Aid- and Medic-level urgency), a resident (apt to overstate severity), or the concierge (reporting second-hand; unable to answer the dispatcher’s questions, perhaps leading to Medic-level escalation).
5.      The low percentage of Aid-level requests from nurses (Kindred’s 25% and Terraces’ 43%) suggests that the nurses themselves are able to handle such Aid-level needs. No breakout attempted for HH.
(You too can access the Fire Department’s data base at data.seattle.gov. Welcome to “Big Data.”)
January 2013




The Evolution of Us

The predecessor series was Gus Armeniades’ June lectures on Judging Science

First lecture on smart animals and the great apes

2nd lecture on hominid evolution and the new niche