A colleague handed me a flyer today from a local cardiac physician group for cool little wallet sized CD they provide their patients with key medical information on it.
The idea is that you carry this card in your wallet and in an emergency situation you can hand the card to a provider who can then view it on a computer capable of reading a data CD. Even if you are unconscious, medical personnel can find the card style CD and view it.
The CD contains things like:
For emergency situations, clients are given a Ready Reference Card which contains all the key medical information and alerts. This PHI easily folds to the size of credit card for wallet use and multiple copies can be kept in other key areas, for example in a specially identified pocket on the client's refrigerator where emergency personnel are trained to look.
Because the Ready Reference is a paper record it is immediately available to emergency personnel in settings where a CD reader may not be at hand such as the senior's home, as shopping center, and so on. It is also quick and very inexpensive to reprint when updates are needed.
The point here is not that technology is bad. On the contrary, technology enables both of these solutions. We should put it to work in the most effective ways we can devise for seniors and their families.
The idea is that you carry this card in your wallet and in an emergency situation you can hand the card to a provider who can then view it on a computer capable of reading a data CD. Even if you are unconscious, medical personnel can find the card style CD and view it.
The CD contains things like:
- medication lists
- current diagnosis
- current allergies
- discharge summaries
- diagnostic test results
- and even educational materials
- First, not all emergencies will allow time for medical staff to leave the patient in order to find a PC with a CD drive and review a set of unfamiliar computer documents.
- Second, in order for this information to be easily read in an emergency situation, it is also easily read by anyone who steals or even simply has access to a person's wallet. Because it's a CD, it's also not clear exactly what data is on the record; leaving seniors and families caring for aging parents to wonder what information is potentially disclosed.
- Additionally, the currency of the data may be questionable. Frequent health and medication changes are common in older adults and this approach requires notification back to the provider, payment of an update fee, and the reissuing of the wallet CD. Allowing reasonable times for such activity, it could be very difficult to keep this up to date.
- Even small scratches from "wallet wear" on the CD can render it unreadable. Something that wouldn't be readily apparent until the CD was checked in a computer drive. Often, I fear, at the time the information is most needed.
- Lastly, the completeness of the data may be in question as it relies on the patient, often a senior with depression or memory loss, to report the activities of the disjoint senior health care system.
For emergency situations, clients are given a Ready Reference Card which contains all the key medical information and alerts. This PHI easily folds to the size of credit card for wallet use and multiple copies can be kept in other key areas, for example in a specially identified pocket on the client's refrigerator where emergency personnel are trained to look.
Because the Ready Reference is a paper record it is immediately available to emergency personnel in settings where a CD reader may not be at hand such as the senior's home, as shopping center, and so on. It is also quick and very inexpensive to reprint when updates are needed.
The point here is not that technology is bad. On the contrary, technology enables both of these solutions. We should put it to work in the most effective ways we can devise for seniors and their families.
George Slater
Comments for Piecemeal Tools for Eldercare