- From: Rochford, John <john.rochford@umassmed.edu>
- Date: Sun, 10 May 2015 15:05:00 +0000
- To: "lisa.seeman" <lisa.seeman@zoho.com>, Katie Haritos-Shea GMAIL <ryladog@gmail.com>
- CC: "'Michael Pluke'" <Mike.Pluke@castle-consult.com>, "'public-cognitive-a11y-tf'" <public-cognitive-a11y-tf@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <55BD19D83AA2BE499FBE026983AB2B58363116BF@ummscsmbx01.ad.umassmed.edu>
Hi Lisa, That is a good approach. The only (small) issue I have is that “abnormal” may be quite difficult to define. If we have to, I suggest an aggregate definition with a note that it would have to be evaluated on a case-by-case basis per individual. John John Rochford<http://profiles.umassmed.edu/profiles/display/132901> UMass Medical School/E.K. Shriver Center Director, INDEX Program Instructor, Family Medicine & Community Health www.DisabilityInfo.org Twitter: @ClearHelper<https://twitter.com/clearhelper> [Facebook Button]<http://www.facebook.com/pages/New-England-INDEXShriver-CenterUMass-Medical-School/227064920160>[Twitter Button]<https://twitter.com/NEINDEX> [WordPress Logo] <http://www.disabilityinfo.org/blog/> From: lisa.seeman [mailto:lisa.seeman@zoho.com] Sent: Sunday, May 10, 2015 2:34 AM To: Katie Haritos-Shea GMAIL Cc: Rochford, John; 'Michael Pluke'; 'public-cognitive-a11y-tf' Subject: RE: A proposal for updating the aging and dementia section of user research Can we see if we have consensus on the first item - Re-title the section “Mild Cognitive Impairment and Dementia”. The introduction can explain that things such as memory loss can often increase with age but it is only when this is abnormal that it gets classified as Mild Cognitive Impairment or, if worse as one of the forms of dementia, most typically Alzheimer’s Katie, John, do you have any issues with this? All the best Lisa Seeman Athena ICT Accessibility Projects <http://accessibility.athena-ict.com> LinkedIn<http://il.linkedin.com/in/lisaseeman/>, Twitter<https://twitter.com/SeemanLisa> ---- On Mon, 04 May 2015 16:54:23 +0300 Katie Haritos-Shea GMAIL<ryladog@gmail.com<mailto:ryladog@gmail.com>> wrote ---- While I agree that this section needs clearing up, I do not agree to all of these changes. I will be on the will today,,,, * katie * Katie Haritos-Shea Senior Accessibility SME (WCAG/Section 508/ADA/AODA) Cell: 703-371-5545 | ryladog@gmail.com<mailto:ryladog@gmail.com> | Oakton, VA | LinkedIn Profile<http://www.linkedin.com/in/katieharitosshea/> | Office: 703-371-5545 From: Rochford, John [mailto:john.rochford@umassmed.edu] Sent: Monday, May 4, 2015 8:55 AM To: Michael Pluke; public-cognitive-a11y-tf Subject: RE: A proposal for updating the aging and dementia section of user research Hi Mike, +1 from me. John John Rochford UMass Medical School/E.K. Shriver Center Director, INDEX Program Instructor, Family Medicine & Community Health http://www.DisabilityInfo.org Twitter: @ClearHelper <http://www.facebook.com/pages/New-England-INDEXShriver-CenterUMass-Medical-School/227064920160> From: Michael Pluke [mailto:Mike.Pluke@castle-consult.com] Sent: Sunday, May 03, 2015 4:08 PM To: public-cognitive-a11y-tf Subject: A proposal for updating the aging and dementia section of user research Before any changes are made to the “Aging and Dementia” section of the User Research document I would like to get agreement to an overall approach that hopefully avoids the impression that aging is in itself a cognitive condition. I propose that we should: - Re-title the section “Mild Cognitive Impairment and Dementia”. The introduction can explain that things such as memory loss can often increase with age but it is only when this is abnormal that it gets classified as Mild Cognitive Impairment or, if worse as one of the forms of dementia, most typically Alzheimer’s. - Change the heading “Symptoms” into “Challenges”. The aphasia and dyslexia sections have separate headings “symptoms” and “challenges” but as we are not trying to supersede standards like DSM-5 it probably isn’t wise to try to give a supposedly authoritative list of symptoms. The existing content is a very reasonable set of challenges that many people with various forms of dementia may experience. Also people who are normally aging will also experience some of these. - Give one list of challenges that apply to all of the categories under this heading e.g. MCI, Alzheimer’s, other forms of dementia and even aging. The existing document gives four different lists of “symptoms” for: o “Common Symptoms of Cognitive Decline Due to Both Aging and Dementia”, o “Symptoms of Cognitive Decline Due to Aging” and, o “Symptoms of Alzheimer’s” o “Symptoms of Less-Common Dementia (Non-Alzheimer's)” but it is exactly the same list apart from the addition of one extra “symptom” for Alzheimer’s and a few minor additional notes in places. These minor changes could be details added to the single list. If this overall approach is acceptable, then changes can begin to be made in line with the above. Best regards Mike <http://www.facebook.com/pages/New-England-INDEXShriver-CenterUMass-Medical-School/227064920160> <http://www.facebook.com/pages/New-England-INDEXShriver-CenterUMass-Medical-School/227064920160>
Received on Sunday, 10 May 2015 15:05:34 UTC