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it's changing everything about how we

work I really think it's transformation

one patient one record one team it's

very positive for us one of the biggest

challenges that we've had with Kathleen's

situation is that because she's involved

with so many different physicians and

has been a part of different clinics

while we were trying to find the

diagnosis we've had to accumulate and

carry around a lot of information to

ensure that the doctors are getting the

full picture of her health there's

always this sort of niggling fear in the

background that we've missed something

before the new health information system

nurses are required to go to multiple

systems to get up-to-date patient

information but now nurses are no longer

limited by paper charts and disjointed

systems we're now able to access the

entire patient story anywhere at any

time another great feature is something

called my chart the online portal that's

available to patients and Families for

them to be able to access their

information and stay informed in their

care the new system integrates all the

information in one place so that we're

not spending as much time searching for

information we're able to spend more

quality time with their patients at the

bedside one integrated electronic record

will allow all the clinicians access to

their patients information anytime

that means that the care that they can

provide will be coordinated it will be

collaborative it will be safer and it

will be of the highest quality if we can

arrive at an appointment and know that

all of the healthcare providers that are

a part of that appointment have the

information ahead of time we don't have

to worry about talking and retelling her

story again we don't have to worry about

maybe missing a little bit of

information it takes that burden off of

us and it frees us up to be her parents

and her parents only and to focus on her

as the the central person in these

visits and what's going on with her one

of the most exciting features of our new

health information system is barcoding

every patient that comes to sick kids

gets a new and improved ID band that

contains barcodes the nurses are

carrying smartphones that can act as a

barcode scanner to help verify patient

identity right at the bedside when a

medication needs to be given the nurse

can scan the patient and scan the

medication this ensures that we're

giving the right patient the right

medication at the right time it's one of

the many ways our new health information

system is helping us take quality of

care at SickKids to the next level over

the next 10 years advances in technology

are going to transform the way we

deliver care we need to not only

reimagine our campus but also the

systems and technologies within our

walls investing in technology today is

the first step towards building the sick

kids of tomorrow where clinicians use

state-of-the-art technologies empowered

by digital health information to provide

faster safer and higher quality care

you

For more infomation >> Our digital revolution - Duration: 3:13.

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My (purely digital) September TBR - Duration: 5:15.

Hello and welcome to my channel everybody!

I'm Steph. I wanted to film my September

TBR or to-be-read pile today and I

kind of thought I wanted to show you

this nice stack of books I wanted to

read, until I realized that all the books

I'm planning to read in September are

electronic...

Basically I'm going travelling to Cracow

for a week and so that involves a 26-hour

there-and-back journey so I'm going

to be reading a lot of audiobooks,

or rather listening to a lot of audiobooks,

as well as reading books on my Kindle,

simply because I don't want to be

carrying around heavy bags with books.

I mean actually I would love to carry

around heavy backs with books but I

think my back and my shoulders might

kill me after that. So let's get into my

TBR for September. First there's a book

that I've actually already started which

is Hidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly.

I've watched a film twice now and

absolutely loved it and so the second

time I watched it I realized that

there's still so much that I don't know

about these women that I really needed

to read the book. It's amazing what the

background is of all this, how just

because of their skin colour and their

gender they were so discriminated

against. There are some things in there

that I absolutely cannot believe, like

how if you married you could no longer

be a teacher. It just makes no sense to me.

So I really want to continue with

this book. Hopefully the library will

still have it because I actually

borrowed it off my local library. But so

I'm hoping to be able to read it soon.

My trip to Cracow will actually involve

going to the Auschwitz concentration

camp, and while I've been reading a lot

of books about this topic already, there

are three in particular that I want to

read in September as part of this

journey. So first I want to re-listen

to an audiobook that I listened to

earlier this year which is The Librarian

of Auschwitz by Antonio Iturbe.

I'm guessing that's how you

pronounce his name. It is actually the

real-life experience of an Auschwitz

prisoner: a girl named Dita Kraus who

tried to bring the magic of books into

Auschwitz and risked her life to do so.

I absolutely love this audiobook when I

listened to it the first time around and

on my Goodreads account I actually wrote

when I finished it that I did not know

how to put my feelings into words, and

I'm guessing that will still be true

this time around. But I think it'll be

very very different listening to the

audiobook while also being in the place

where all this happened.

The second Auschwitz-trip book is Primo Levi's

If This is a Man. I don't really know

anything about this book, other than

Primo Levi was an Auschwitz survivor and that

this is his story. And lastly for this

trip I wanted to read Desmond and Mpho Tutu's book

The Book of Forgiving -

The Fourfold Path for Healing Ourselves and Our World

because this whole question

about Auschwitz has been making me think

so much about what the limits of

forgiveness are, and I believe that

Desmond Tutu tried to deal with this a

little bit in this book. So I'm really

curious to see what his thoughts on that

topic are. On to some maybe more

lighthearted books that I'm trying to

listen to on the coach journey:

Number one of that is The Eye of Minds which is

part of the Mortality Doctrine by

James Dashner

who is the author of the Maze Runner,

and I know nothing about, but I saw it on my

local library overdrive and so I

downloaded the audiobook, and I'm hoping

to be entertained for quite a while

because I actually downloaded the entire

trilogy so I should not get bored on

that journey. Next I got Trouble with Lichen

by John Wyndham. And I think it

must have been around a year ago or so

when I started reading John Wyndham and

absolutely loved his style of writing,

which is pretty bizarre because it is

1950s English which to modern-day ears

sounds really really strange, but in some

weird way it just feels really comfy to

me and so whenever I need a little

pick-me-up I loved reading John Wyndham books;

which are also dystopian and just weird

and all that but somehow I feel much

better reading them.

Lastly I'm really really excited about

reading the third of the Wayfarers

trilogy by Becky Chambers which is

Record of a Spaceborn Few. I absolutely

loved the first two in the series, so that's

The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet

and A Closed and Common Orbit.

I just love how she deals with this

question of otherness, of different

races and aliens and gender and what it

means to be family. So when that third

book came out I immediately bought it,

but I actually haven't got around to

reading it yet. Maybe also because I'm a

little bit worried about actually

finishing it and then being done with the

series and having this massive book-hangover...

But I really do want to read it,

so I really need to get into that.

Alright that's my TBR for September.

Please let me know if you're planning to

read any of these books or if you have

already read them. I would love to hear

your thoughts in the comments below.

See you next week! Bye!

For more infomation >> My (purely digital) September TBR - Duration: 5:15.

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Dig(g)i bitte was?! - 'M' wie 'Mobile Gaming' im Kieler Digital-ABC - Duration: 3:06.

For more infomation >> Dig(g)i bitte was?! - 'M' wie 'Mobile Gaming' im Kieler Digital-ABC - Duration: 3:06.

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COOKING ON HIGH (Digital Exclusive) - "Cannimal Style" Burger Recipe - Duration: 0:30.

- Got there a cheeseburger on a seasoned bun

with tomato and lettuce.

Then we got sliced steak style potatoes

with my cannabis oil boss sauce.

Alright guys, bong appetit.

(laughing)

- It looks very Fourth of Julyish to me,

it's like it's very Americana.

Considering there's weed in it,

I think there's some kind of poetic metaphor

with freedom there.

(laughing)

(upbeat music)

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