Showing posts with label Healthcare. Show all posts

Friday, December 9, 2022

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Track Your Health


1. How do you know when you are not in good health? What are the first signs that you might be coming down with something?

2. Is your health your responsibility alone, or are there other stakeholders involved e.g. an annual check-up at the doctor's for the purposes of health insurance?

3. What technology do you use to monitor your health? Do you have a thermometer, or a blood pressure monitor? Do you have any wearable technology that measures the number of steps you take, heart rate, or blood sugar? If not, would you consider using them? Are they necessary?

4. In terms of privacy, do you think your health should be the concern of your employer?

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Read article hereTrack Your Health

5. What is your reaction? Do you think that the Cleveland Clinic is right to increase health insurance premiums to staff members who don't participate in "wellness programmes"? Do you think that questioning employees on their marital status is appropriate, or is it justified in an age where data collection is the norm?

6. Which of the following questions would you object to if they were part of a workplace questionnaire?

a) Do you plan to start a family?

b) Have you recently been through a divorce?

c) Which social groups do you belong to?

d) How many units of alcohol do you consume in a week? 

Is there a less confrontational way of finding out this information?

7. If you were offered a position with your 'dream' company and they asked such questions, would you go there or walk away?

8. How would you describe the attitude of the author of the article? Is she hostile towards this type of monitoring? Do you not think that in an age where everything can be measured, there is nothing sinister here, and that if anyone's privacy has been infringed, it can be taken into account by an understanding employer?

9. Does your country have any legislation on the recording and usage of your health data? If not, should it? In the UK, most (all?) data is anonymised before being given to third parties involved in research - isn't this enough to safeguard your privacy?

10. Shouldn't employment healthcare be a win-win situation for both employer and employee? Healthcare costs were reduced for BP (see article) and Bates College employees lost weight using wearable trackers. Why would we push back on something that is designed to make us healthier?

11. Does your employer provide healthy food options in its canteen/restaurant? Does it offer gym membership? Are there any facilities for showering at your workplace? If your company proposed a treadmill desk, would you or your colleagues use them? Would peer pressure be enough for you to use/not use them?

12. Do you agree that what is driving the desire to monitor employees is 'big tech' companies, and not necessarily employers seeking to reduce costs? (After all, humans have been employees for thousands of years without the need for intrusive monitoring)

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Situation

In an effort to reduce employee absenteeism through ill health at AndrewCorp, the CEO (your teacher) wants to introduce wearable health trackers to the workforce as a means of improving productivity and employee health. As the chief representative of said employees, make your concerns known to the CEO.

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Discuss quotes

“He who knows others is wise; he who knows himself is enlightened.”

― Lao Tzu

"A consultant starts by offering a 'solution' and creates a problem.”

--- Nassim Taleb 

"The difference between technology and slavery is that slaves are fully aware that they are not free."

--- Nassim Taleb

"Civilization advances by extending the number of important operations which we can perform without thinking of them."

--- Alfred North Whitehead

“If you read someone else's diary, you get what you deserve.”

― David Sedaris

Student Handout PDF: Track Your Health

Photo: Pearlsband


Monday, June 20, 2022

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Vintage Hospitals


1. Compare today to the 1950s (both in the UK and in the your country) with the following criteria:

Music

TV shows

Clothes

Cars

Restaurants

Telephones

2. What types of buildings do hospitals use in your country/the UK? Have you used one recently?

Read article hereVintage Hospitals Reading

3. What is your reaction? The hospital settings are nice, but is hospital the best place for dementia sufferers?

4. Do you agree with the following?

a) The 1950 decor is only appropriate for today's seniors - future patients will need makeovers that are related to the 60s/70s etc.

b) Children's hospitals are child-friendly (i.e. age-group friendly). There is nothing new here with these makeovers.

c) Patient/condition-friendly hospitals/wards should be the standard whatever the illness.

d) Dementia is an umbrella term that covers many conditions that affect the brain. The effectiveness of these latest measures suggest that the brain is capable of 'self-repair', whatever the condition.

e) Triggering patients' memories could be beneficial in treating other diseases.

5. What is the ambience of a typical hospital in your country like? Are there any that are designed in a way that puts patients at ease?

6. What features would/should a reassuringly familiar hospital/ward have in your country?

7.  Do your health authorities have any different ways of dealing with dementia?

8. (God forbid) You wake up in hospital. What one hospital feature would give you a boost; what one hospital feature would likely cause you to relapse?

9. How quickly do you adjust to your surroundings? When you are in a different city/country do you do anything that reminds you of home/more familiar circumstances?

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Situation

You are the CEO of a company that makes nostalgic decor suitable for hospital settings. It's still a relatively new phenomenon in Rubovia. Explain to the head of the Rubovian health service why he should incorporate dementia-friendly makeovers.

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Discuss quotes

“One of the keys to happiness is a bad memory.” 

― Rita Mae Brown

“A clear conscience is the sure sign of a bad memory.” 

― Mark Twain

“Remembrance of things past is not necessarily the remembrance of things as they were.” 

― Marcel Proust

“I'd trade all my tomorrows for one single yesterday.” 

― Kris Kristofferson

“Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards.” 

― Søren Kierkegaard

Student Handout PDFVintage Hospitals 


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Alexa Healthcare


1. Do you have voice search on your phone/mobile devices? What do you use it for? What do you say to it exactly?

2. Would you use a digital device for the following?

• managing money

• telling the time

• playing music

• videos of cats

• homework

• home security

• exercise

3. How good are the following at providing health advice? Would you follow their advice?

A chemist

The Internet

A family relative

Magazines

Medical journals

Free-phone numbers

Read article hereAlexa Healthcare Reading

4. Would you feel comfortable using machines for health advice?

5. If you wanted to ask Alexa a healthcare question, what would you say?

Complete the following:

"Alexa, how do I ______ a migraine?”; ‘Alexa, what are the _______ of flu?’; and “Alexa, what are the _______ of chickenpox?”

6. Match these symptoms to the above questions:

You'll have a raised temperature, a sore throat, and may have aches and pains.

Take an aspirin, and lie down in a cool, dark room. Apply a cold flannel to the brow.

You'll feel very tired and have a raised temperature. You will have a red rash covering your skin.

7. Who will benefit the most from using voice search for medical enquiries? Choose from the following: the Health Minister, the elderly, the blind, doctors

8. Do you agree with Big Brother Watch when they say that this is a 'data protection disaster waiting to happen'?

9. Is there an equivalent to Alexa in your country that offers voice-search medical advice?

10. Amazon stores voice recordings from Alexa permanently unless you delete them - the recordings are also sent to a team of technicians in India and Romania where they are listened to in order to improve Alexa's accuracy. Does this worry you?

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Situation

You are the UK health secretary. You have called a press conference to announce the Alexa/NHS voice assistant. Answer any of the questions from the awaiting journalists.

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Discuss comments

1. "Not only will you have a surveillance device in your house but you will be willingly telling it your most personal information. What could possibly go wrong?"

2. "The people that would use Alexa are probably the same ones that currently look up their symptoms on the internet before bothering their doctor. I don't think this is going to reduce any pressure on the NHS."

3. "Alexa, I've got a headache and a runny nose and a bit of a cough.......

4. 'Here would you like to buy this for £15 it will make you feel better......"

Student Handout PDFAlexa Healthcare