

#Expert choice how to#
Experts also provided insights into the different types of ice cream scoops, which ones work better than others and how to use an ice cream scoop most effectively. While there are several different kinds of scoops, experts we spoke to universally recommended Zeroll’s ice cream scoops, which have heat-conductive fluid inside that slightly melts the ice cream on contact for a smoother scoop. Luckily, there are specialized ice cream scoops available for purchase, just like the ones they use in the ice cream shops. I personally have developed a callous on my hand from digging my spoon into completely frozen ice cream - it was worth it, but there had to have been better options. READ MORE: Langford woman with cystic fibrosis critical of Island’s COVID testing processĭo you have a story tip? Email: us on Twitter and Instagram, and like us on Facebook.We all love ice cream, but sometimes, when you pull a big tub from the bottom corner of your freezer, that stuff is a rock. shortens wait between second, third vaccine doses for pregnant people “COVID is a virus that is mutating, and it’s changing … so we need technologies to be able to disseminate that information in a safe manner, as well as to guide people to the services they need.” Moving forward, especially with the Omicron wave challenging the way officials handle COVID, health informatics experts will have to consistently revisit the best ways to tell B.C. And if we didn’t have those processes in place, we might not have been able to effectively do that.” “We immunized a huge number of people in this province in a very short period of time. “Getting people into queue, prioritizing based on risk and then having individuals choose what form of communication they want (worked well),” she said. The latter makes getting a COVID vaccine as accessible as possible and communicating directly with residents was especially vital at the onset of vaccination efforts, she said. Centre for Disease Control COVID-19 dashboard and its vaccination booking system. Two initiatives Borycki said best represent advances in patient choice are the B.C. “A person can say that they’d like to have information presented to them in different ways … not only online, but by phone, or through texting or face-to-face.” READ MORE: Island Health looks to shorten wait times for booster shots with new mass clinicsĪ positive outcome of this shift, she added, is that patients have more choice in how they receive healthcare services. “But you also have face-to-face visits taking place.” “There was a real push towards bringing in virtual care so that health professionals could still connect with vulnerable individuals,” Borycki said. Nearly two years later, medical care has evolved into a hybrid system of in-person and online options. The number of physicians and patients familiar with virtual care jumped significantly between 20 because of the pandemic.

“And there have been new technologies that have been introduced to be able to support things like social distancing.”

“There are a lot of technologies that we had in the healthcare system that are now being used more extensively because of COVID,” Borycki told Black Press Media. From Zoom calls with family doctors to text alerts about booster shots, health technology has evolved rapidly. Her field has been at the forefront of new patient-facing solutions to problems posed by COVID-19. Her work revolves around health informatics – developing, implementing and maintaining digital technologies in healthcare such as patient records and telehealth programs. Behind the scenes, one expert in digital health systems says the way we think and talk about health has shifted drastically, too.Įlizabeth Borycki is a professor in the School of Health Information Science at the University of Victoria. The COVID-19 pandemic has changed how B.C.
