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Elderly Long Term Care Residents Suffer Cognitively During Disasters

October 26th, 2011

In a summer with unprecedented weather events, from tornados, floods, fires and hurricanes, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing found that physiological changes associated with aging and the presence of chronic illness make older adults more susceptible to illness or injury, even death, during a disaster.
Investigators followed 17 long-term care residents, with a mean age of 86, who were evacuated for five days due to a severe summer storm and were relocated to different facilities with different care providers and physical surroundings. The displaced participants experienced delirium, cognitive changes, hospitalizations, and death, according to research published in the Journal of Gerontological Nursing.

“Older adults often have visual and hearing deficits, making it more difficult to interpret their environments and precipitating increased stress,” said lead author Pamela Cacchione, PhD, APRN, GNP, BC. “This stress can also exacerbate chronic illnesses, further precipitating delirium.”
The 17 participants were part of a broader intervention study testing the effectiveness of a nursing intervention to improve vision and hearing impairment and decrease incident delirium and other outcomes.

As part of the parent study residents were measured with four different tests. The MMSE is a 30-item mental status test that includes questions on orientation, language, attention and recall. The GDS is a 30-item interview based depression rating scale requiring yes or no responses, the NEECHAM is a 9-item nurse rated scale that includes the participant’s vital signs and pulse, which is designed to assess for acute confusion/delirium and the mCAM, another delirium assessment tool which includes tasks to assess attention.

The participants were all screened with the NEECHAM and the mCAM on the day of the severe storm and three times a week for two weeks upon their return to their home facility. The scores were compared with their Week 1 scores.

“This study provided documentation of what clinicians have known for some time, but such anecdotal accounts are seldom described with the clinical instrumentation described here,” said Dr. Cacchione. “Unexpected relocation often leads to poor outcomes for nursing home residents.”

The study, published in September 2011 issue, found that more than half the residents were negatively affected by evacuation and showed signs of delirium within the two weeks immediately following – two participants were hospitalized and one died.

“Nurses in all care settings, not just LTC sites, should be aware of the potential difficulties older adults may experience as a result of a natural disaster, especially when evacuations and relocations occur,” said Dr. Cacchione. “Basic physical care, ongoing assessment of chronic conditions, medication management, the return to familiar surroundings, and the return of valued objects should be facilitated as soon as possible.”

(Original Source: HERE)


Colo. student develops Twitter app for disasters

October 3rd, 2011

By Brittany Anas
The Daily Camera

twitter Twitter has become popular during disasters because it offers a concise and efficient communication medium.

BOULDER, Colo. — Inspired by the swift swapping of emergency information through Twitter during last year’s Fourmile Fire, a University of Colorado graduate student developed an Android application to help people use a common language while tweeting during disasters.

Daniel Schaefer, a University of Colorado doctoral student in communication, created a software application — or “app” — for mobile devices that turns everyday language into a Twitter syntax used during disasters through a special smart phone keypad.

Just as public safety communication codes were developed for citizens’ band radios — or CBs — that grew in popularity in the 1970s, a common language is emerging for disaster communication on Twitter.

Twitter has become popular during disasters because it offers a concise and efficient communication medium, Schaefer said. But, he said, a need to standardize the syntaxes used on Twitter has surfaced particularly for the emergency personnel, affected individuals, concerned loved ones, information officers and journalists who use it to provide and monitor information and collaborate on rescue efforts.

Already, Android phones have downloadable smart keyboards that allow users to type in emoticons or foreign languages.

“I thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be great if there were a keyboard for people using Twitter during a disaster to use standard codes?’” Schaefer said.

Schaefer’s application uses syntax developed in 2009 by doctoral student Kate Starbird of CU’s Project EPIC (Empowering the Public with Information in Crisis) research group. Nearly 3,000 tweets using the “Tweak the Tweet” syntax were posted in the weeks following Haiti’s 2010 earthquake.

During the Fourmile Fire, Colorado’s most destructive wildfire, Schaefer noticed that people were using wrong hashtags to mark their tweets for easy searching.

Schaefer’s app helps provide a solution to better streamline emergency tweets.

The free app is called the Bucket Brigade Keyboard. It transforms the standard smart phone keyboard display into a keypad of a dozen message choices such as “help,” “location” and “request.”

When those messages are selected, corresponding tweets that could include a user’s status, needs or offers to help are queued for posting online.

The app, for example, turns “I’m Ok” into “#imok.”

Schaefer entered the Bucket Brigade Keyboard in the Federal Communications Commission’s “Apps for Communities” contest.

The challenge called for apps that help local government deliver quality-of-life improving information to populations that are typically disenfranchised or disconnected from broadband communications.

The app has been downloaded in 20 countries.

(Original Source: http://www.firerescue1.com/social-media-for-firefighters/articles/1130209-Colo-student-develops-Twitter-app-for-disasters/)


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