The Doctor will “e” You Now

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Category : Health, News and Information, Technology, Uncategorized

Will your health be remotely monitored in the future by apps on your cell phone? The simple answer is YES, and…. it’s here now! Cardiologist Eric Topol (Scripts La Jolla), is leading the way on the charge towards patients taking ownership of their health by being plugged into immediate diagnostic information. In the near term your doctor may provide you with an apps on your phone that allows you to check on such things as glucose monitoring by simply touching your phone and wearing a button-sized devise on your abdomen! Real time results may help patients make decisions about exactly what impacts their health and then make decisions that help them to take charge of their own lifestyle changes. Watch the video below for insight into these exciting developments.

 

Is your local Barnes & Noble closing?

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Category : News and Information, Technology

barnes-and-noble-storefront

 

 

 

The previously posted article discussed the growing popularity of E-Readers and the benefits that these readers could provide. In realtion to that topic, Barnes & Noble is downsizing its retail locations by approximately one third over the next 10 years. This is due to a decrease in sales most likely influenced by an increasing consumer preferance for digital reading. Reading on a phone or a tablet is definitely convenient and efficient but many would agree that printed books will always have a certain charm.

 

Find out more about the store closings in the article below:

 

Barnes & Noble Plans to Eliminate 30% of

Stores Over Next 10 Years

Barnes-and-noble-closed

Seth Fiegerman
It’s going to get even harder to find a bookstore to shop at in the next few years.Barnes & Noble, the world’s largest bookstore, is planning to cut down the number of bricks-and-mortar locations it operates by as much as a third in the next 10 years. CEO Mitchell Klipper told the Wall Street Journal that the company will have between 450 and 500 stores in 10 years, down from the 689 retail stores it currently operates.”You have to adjust your overhead, and get smart with smart systems,” Klipper told the Journal. “Is it what it used to be when you were opening 80 stores a year and dropping stores everywhere? Probably not. It’s different. But every business evolves.”Barnes & Noble, like other book store chains, has been squeezed in recent years by the rise of digital books and competition from e-commerce sites like Amazon. Borders, one of Barnes & Noble’s longtime competitors, went out of business in 2011 in part because it took longer to get into the e-reading space and ultimately was less successful at it.Barnes & Noble, for its part, has had success with its Nook tablets and e-readers, but the company appears to be struggling with the reality of running hundreds of retail stores at a time when more readers shop online. Last April, the company decided to spin off its Nook division as a separate venture backed partly by Microsoft. In the December quarter, Barnes & Noble, no longer bolstered by Nook sales, revealed that its revenues had dropped my more than 10% from the same period a year earlier, due in part to an 8.2% drop in store sales.Even the 689 stores that Barnes & Noble has in operation now represents a significant decline from the 726 stores it had running at its peak in 2008.Source: http://mashable.com/2013/01/28/barnes-and-noble-closing-stores/

Senior Usage of E-Readers

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Category : Technology

 

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A wonderful present is the gift of reading.  Many seniors love to read but due to poor eyesight it can become very difficult.  Of course, there are magnifying glasses but many find them awkward. The iPad, Kindle, and a new wave of other tablets have been growing in popularity.  Some older adults are uncomfortable using the new technology, but others find it fascinating.  Here is an article discussing the benefit of enhanced reading using E-Readers.

 

 

DECEMBER 12, 2012, 5:00 AM

The Gift of Reading

By JUDITH GRAHAM

This is the year of the tablet, David Pogue of The Times has told us, and that may be good news for seniors who open holiday wrappings to find one tucked inside. They see better with tablets’ adjustable type size, new research shows. Reading becomes easier again.

This may seem obvious — find me someone over 40 who doesn’t see better when fonts are larger — but it’s the business of science to test our assumptions.

Dr. Daniel Roth, an eye specialist and clinical associate professor at the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Brunswick, N.J., offered new evidence of tablets’ potential benefits last month at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Ophthalmology.

His findings, based on tests conducted with 66 adults age 50 and over: older people read faster (a mean reading speed of 128 words per minute) when using an iPad, compared to a newspaper with the same 10-point font size (114 words per minute).

When the font was increased to 18 points — easy to do on an iPad — reading speed increased to 137 words per minute.

“If you read more slowly, it’s tedious,” Dr. Roth said, explaining why reading speed is important. “If you can read more fluidly, it’s more comfortable.”

What makes the real difference, Dr. Roth theorizes, is tablets’ illuminated screen, which heightens contrast between words and the background on which they sit.

Contrast sensitivity — the visual ability to differentiate between foreground and background information — becomes poorer as we age, as does the ability to discriminate fine visual detail, notes Dr. Kevin Paterson, a psychologist at the University of Leicester, who recently published a separate study on why older people struggle to read fine print.

“There are several explanations for the loss of sensitivity to fine detail that occurs with older age,” Dr. Paterson explained in an e-mail. “This may be due to greater opacity of the fluid in the eye, which will scatter incoming light and reduce the quality of the projection of light onto the retina. It’s also hypothesized that changes in neural transmission affect the processing of fine visual detail.”

Combine these changes with a greater prevalence of eye conditions like macular degeneration and diabetic retinopathy in older adults, and you get millions of people who cannot easily do what they have done all their lives — read and stay connected to the world of ideas, imagination and human experience.

“The No. 1 complaint I get from older patients is that they love to read but can’t, and this really bothers them,” Dr. Roth said. The main option has been magnifying glasses, which many people find cumbersome and inconvenient.

Some words of caution are in order. First, Dr. Roth’s study has not been published yet; it was presented as a poster at the scientific meeting and publicized by the academy, but it has not yet gone through comprehensive, rigorous peer review.

Second, Dr. Roth’s study was completed before the newest wave of tablets from Microsoft, Google, Samsung and others became available. The doctor made no attempt to compare different products, with one exception. In the second part of his study, he compared results for the iPad with those for a Kindle. But it was not an apples to apples comparison, because the Kindle did not have a back-lit screen.

This section of his study involved 100 adults age 50 and older who read materials in a book, on an iPad and on the Kindle. Book readers recorded a mean reading speed of 187 words per minute when the font size was set at 12; Kindle readers clocked in at 196 words per minute and iPad readers at 224 words per minute at the same type size. Reading speed improved even more drastically for a subset of adults with the poorest vision.

Again, Apple’s product came out on top, but that should not be taken as evidence that it is superior to other tablets with back-lit screens and adjustable font sizes. Both the eye academy and Dr. Roth assert that they have no financial relationship with Apple. My attempts to get in touch with the company were not successful.

A final cautionary note should be sounded. Some older adults find digital technology baffling and simply do not feel comfortable using it. For them, a tablet may sit on a shelf and get little if any use.

Others, however, find the technology fascinating. If you want to see an example that went viral on YouTube, watch this video from 2010 of Virginia Campbell, then 99 years old, and today still going strong at the Mary’s Woods Retirement Community in Lake Oswego, Ore.

Ms. Campbell’s glaucoma made it difficult for her to read, and for her the iPad was a blessing, as she wrote in this tribute quoted in an article in The Oregonian newspaper:

To this technology-ninny it’s clear
In my compromised 100th year,
That to read and to write
Are again within sight
Of this Apple iPad pioneer

Caregivers might be delighted — as Ms. Campbell’s daughter was — by older relatives’ response to this new technology, a potential source of entertainment and engagement for those who can negotiate its demands. Or, they might find that old habits die hard and that their relatives continue to prefer a book or newspaper they can hold in their hands to one that appears on a screen.

 

View the original article at:

http://newoldage.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/12/the-gift-of-reading/#more-14050

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