[rehab] Question about Accessing Documentation
Darla Rogers
djrogers0628 at gmail.com
Sat Feb 22 04:14:18 UTC 2014
Hi Debra,
I can understand that; if it was transcribed, you could file it
with the handwritten document to access if later if you needed it. I'm
guessing the office assistance doesn't type them into the computer already
which is a drag.
What other documents are written by hand that you see most?
Sometimes, it can be easier to have a reader because you can ask
your questions then, or the reader can confer with you, as you can often
figure out the handwriting by contexts whereas the reader may not be able
to do this.
I'm curious about other experiences, too.
Darla
-----Original Message-----
From: rehab [mailto:rehab-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Deborah Allen
Sent: Friday, February 21, 2014 8:53 PM
To: rehab at nfbnet.org
Subject: [rehab] Question about Accessing Documentation
Hello,
I would appreciate tips on alternative methods that blind rehabilitation
counselors who have no useable vision use to access handwritten
documentation and other documentation that JAWS does not convert. I am a new
VRS at a state agency, and I am trying to find an efficient and effective
way to read a variety of documents associated with case management. The
database we use for case management is wonderful, but the outside documents
are often a problem. I would prefer a transcriber rather than a reader to
convert the inaccessible medical and other documentation I need to read, but
I am open to other ideas. What has worked for you?
Thank you,
Deborah
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