Arab Times

Seniors can use VR for travel & health issues

Social media distracts nurses

-

TUCSON, Ariz, Oct 16, (Agencies): Joy Golliver recently visited the Washington state community where she and her late husband lived for more than 20 years. And her sons, who live in Seattle, texted their 84-year-old mother asking how she was able to travel from Tucson, Arizona, to Kachess Lake without them knowing. Thanks to virtual reality, Golliver actually never left Tucson. “This technology can take us to any memory in our life that we want to visit,” she said.

Golliver lives at the Fountains, one of two Tucson retirement communitie­s serving as the launching pad for a program to see how virtual reality technology helps seniors. With a headset, residents have been able to ride a roller coaster and visit the Egyptian pyramids, Eiffel Tower and places they used to live. Some researcher­s say virtual reality can aid seniors with cognition, dementia and loneliness.

Dementia

Besides traveling, Golliver is using the technology to help write her memoirs.

The program, Engage VR, was developed for Watermark Retirement Communitie­s specifical­ly. It uses a cordless headset system called Oculus Quest.

Zoe Katleman, a project manager with Watermark, said they will eventually make the technology available at dozens of facilities nationwide, the Arizona Daily Star reported. Watermark also wants to allow residents across its communitie­s to be able to meet up virtually.

Grayson Barnes, 20, spent two years developing the Engage VR program for Watermark while studying at Rochester Institute of Technology. He said most research suggests that dementia patients are more like themselves after experienci­ng virtual reality. Also, one group of researcher­s has “turned to virtual reality as a potential method to screen for early signs of dementia,” Barnes said in an email.

Dr Marvin Slepian, a professor of medicine and director of the Arizona Center for Accelerate­d Biomedical Innovation, said doctors are using virtual reality more often for diagnosing and therapy.

“Advances in wearable technology, virtual reality and integrativ­e imaging hold the promise of revolution­izing how we monitor, control and prevent disease,” Slepian said.

Social media: Nurses’ productivi­ty takes a hit when they become ‘addicted’ to using social media at work, a habit that distracts them from tasks at hand, a small study suggests.

Study co-author Asad Javed, from Hazara University in Mansehra, Pakistan, says nurses who choose to kill time by using social media at work have become a serious issue at hospitals and universiti­es across that country. This behavior causes frequent conflicts among nurses about the assignment of patient care duties, as well as arguments between nurses and patients, he added.

“One of the important reasons we conducted our research on nurses was the critical nature of their jobs, which require them to remain attentive,” Javed told Reuters Health in an email.

To assess relationsh­ips between social media use at work, distractio­n from job tasks and self-rated job performanc­e, Javed’s team recruited nurses through Facebook groups last year.

Altogether, 461 nurses in 53 countries completed the anonymous survey, which included statements such as, “I lose my concentrat­ion during work when I hear the beep sound of notificati­on on social networking site/applicatio­n,” rated by the participan­t on a scale of 1 to 5.

The researcher­s found that increasing use of social media at work was associated with greater distractio­n and poorer job performanc­e. However, nurses able to practice self-management could overcome the urge and focus on work, the study team reports in the Journal of Advanced Nursing.

“Nurses, like the general population, are increasing­ly distracted by attention to social media,” said Cynda Rushton of the Johns Hopkins School of Nursing’s Berman Institute of Bioethics in Baltimore, Maryland, who was not involved in the study.

“Nurses care for some of the most vulnerable people... When social media sites... shift their focus from their core work in ways that may harm their patients, higher standards are justified.” In the paper, researcher­s warn the situation is even worse in public hospitals where nurses have unpredicta­ble and inflexible working hours and heavy workloads. Nurses can change their behavior if made aware of it through training sessions, displaying of posters, or other awareness interventi­ons by hospital administra­tion, Javed noted. Tackling office culture to make it more unacceptab­le to use social media at work could also prove effective.

Rushton said social media policies guarding against privacy violations of patients have been widely establishe­d in the healthcare sector and are usually effective if adequate surveillan­ce is used to enforce them.

Privacy

However, sanctions are typically more stringent when employees violate patients’ privacy, rather than when they misuse social media for purposes unrelated to patient care, she said.

Javed does not advocate a complete ban on use of phones or social media by nurses. “(This) could result in negative consequenc­es considerin­g the myriad of benefits associated with the use of social media for healthcare profession­als reported in several studies,” he said.

“We have an existing social media policy which our department put together around patient privacy,” said Deb Song, associate director of media relations at the Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, who wasn’t involved in the study. “However, we actually want our staff to help promote Rush through social media when appropriat­e.”

Becky Sawyer, Chief Human Resources Officer at Sentara Healthcare, a health system in Virginia, says her organizati­on has launched apps for customers and staff.

“We have policies that encourage our team members not to utilize their mobile devices for personal reasons while caring for or assisting our patients,” she said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait