[humanser] Excess ability question regarding JavaScript and electronic medical record
Dr. Mary Chappell
mtc5 at cox.net
Mon Oct 6 05:23:28 UTC 2014
Beth,
My email has been down so, I am just seeing this. I would like to share with
you my most recent experiences with electronic medical records and what my
employer agreed to do to allow me to complete my documentation and access
records. I am currently going through training with the new scripting, JAWS
and Kurzweil. It is pretty incredible to access the many forms that are
completed daily for patient interaction and, while I waited nearly 4 years
to attain this accessibility, I trust that with time and attention, I will
be able to document in the fullest manner. If I can be of assistance please
let me know and I can let you know how the "reasonable accommodations" came
into being.
Genuinely,
Mary Tatum Chappell, Psy. D.
-----Original Message-----
From: humanser [mailto:humanser-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of David
Andrews via humanser
Sent: Sunday, October 05, 2014 9:41 PM
To: Bet LPC; Human Services Division Mailing List
Subject: Re: [humanser] Excess ability question regarding JavaScript and
electronic medical record
There are not black and white answers to some of the questions you
ask. For example does X work with javascript. It will depend on how
the javascript was written, possibly on the framework used for
development etc. And ... the problems could be with java, not javascript.
All you can do is test with different screen readers. This is what
assistive technology specialists do.
I have heard that some people are able to read screens using the new
version of the KNFB-Reader on the iPhone, but I would guess that this
works for occasional access, I doubt it would be good enough, or easy
enough for regular and constant use.
Dave
At 06:00 PM 10/2/2014, you wrote:
>Hello all,
>I have recently accepted a job offer at a community mental health
>agency. I went down today to test jaws with their electronic medical
>system. It turns out that their system is written in Java script. I
>believe cobalt and Java were also used. The problem is the jaws will
>read none of the screens on their electronic medical record system.
>My question: is there any screen reading software out there that
>will work with JavaScript? My other option is a reasonable
>accommodation is to ask for a reader scribe to help with reading
>electronic charts and documentation. Along the same lines, I know
>that sharp desk will extract text from images. Is there any kind of
>software that might be able to extract the text from the JavaScript
>screen or any kind of iPhone app I can read the screen with. I know
>I'll still need help documenting the least I could try to read the
>charts that way.
>
>
>
>Any help would be appreciated.
>Thank you,
>Beth Sent from my iPhone
David Andrews and long white cane Harry.
E-Mail: dandrews at visi.com or david.andrews at nfbnet.org
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