Gail, I also use ScripTalk from Envision and really like it. It reads you all 
of the information on the printed label. But the pharmacy has to have the 
equipment to create the special label to put on the bottom. It's not a bar 
code, but something called RFID technology (radio frequency identification) and 
NFC (near-field communication) to store and transmit all of the information on 
a printed medication label.

I haven't specifically checked recently, but the only "local" pharmacies that 
seemed to be able to provide the labels were very large stores, e.g. Walmart. 
My local CVs doesn't have it. But the mail-order pharmacies do; you just have 
to make the request that they put that label on all of your prescriptions. 
Sometimes they don't get it right at first, but a second requests usually does 
the trick. Just contact EnVision and they will set it up for you. All free.

I also use bbraille tape labels as others have said. Tina

-----Original Message-----
From: Helen Whitehead via Cookinginthedark 
[mailto:cookinginthedark@acbradio.org]
Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 2:06 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Helen Whitehead
Subject: Re: [CnD] freezing meat and labeling it: Labeling Medication: 
ScripTalk Station Provided by En-Vision America

I'm from Canada, and I have the ScripTalk Station, for   anything I need to 
know about medication I'm taking.
In some Canadian provinces,Shoppers drug mart will honor this device. For free! 
I get a phone call about every 6months, to see if the device is still in good 
working order.
It'll be 2 years this summer that I've had it.
I love it
This information is  from the website.
https://www.afb.org/afbpress/pubnew.asp?DocID=aw140604

An In-Depth Look at the ScripTalk Station from En-Vision America | American 
Foundation for the Blind

 An In-Depth Look at the ScripTalk Station from En-Vision America

In the past several decades we have witnessed a tremendous leap forward in both 
the number and efficacy of prescription medications. The population is
also aging, and when you combine the increased availability of new wonder drugs 
with more and more people who need them, in one sense that can be a prescription
for real trouble.

The more medications we take, the more opportunities we have to get confused 
and make potentially life-threatening mistakes.

According to the
AFB Access to Drug Labels Survey Report,
the print impaired community is particularly at risk for at-home medication 
errors, such as swallowing the wrong pill, missing a refill date, or ingesting
expired medications. Prescription labels contain vital information about our 
medications, including how much to take and when to take them, and yet they
are among the most inaccessible of documents.

Many individuals with visual impairments create and use their own braille 
labels, but if they bring home more than one prescription from the pharmacy,
sighted help is required to create the labels. Since space is at a premium on 
those small medicine bottles, the information is usually abridged and 
incomplete.
Nearly 90 percent of the visually impaired population does not use braille 
regularly and so those individuals must develop other strategies to distinguish
their medications from one another. Some use rubber bands or other markers to 
help tell the bottles apart (one rubber band means blood pressure medicine
and a stick-on raised dot means stomach medication). Others might store one 
prescription bottle on a lower medicine cabinet shelf and another on the top
shelf.

But what about those who are taking six, seven, even eight or more medications 
a day? How do you keep them straight in your head? Particularly if you are
elderly and your memory isn't as snappy as it once was, it can be very 
difficult to remember how much of which medication to take, and when.

If you don't believe this is a serious accessibility issue, just try to imagine 
a sighted individual telling his or her pharmacist, "No thank you. I don't
need labels on my prescription bottles. I will remember the instructions 
precisely, and I'll be able to figure out which medicine is which by feeling the
size and shape of the pills."

Happily, technology has provided at least one solution to this serious problem.
The ScripTalk Station
 from
En-Vision America
 voices prescription label information at the press of a button. In this 
article we'll take an in-depth look at this useful device, and we'll also tell
you how you can join En-Vision America's Pharmacy Freedom program and get a 
ScripTalk Station on permanent loan to read specially tagged prescriptions
labeled by a participating pharmacy.

ScripTalk Station: What It Is and How It Works

ScripTalk Station is an accessible prescription reading device that allows 
print impaired individuals to manage their own medications without guesswork
or sighted assistance. Special "talking labels" incorporate radio-frequency 
identification (RFID) chips smaller than a grain of rice to store prescription
data encoded by a participating pharmacist and affixed to the prescription 
bottle or package. The ScripTalk Reader scans the label and then uses voice
synthesis to announce the medication name, dosage, refill date, and other 
essential information.

What's in the Box

The ScripTalk Station package includes the ScripTalk Station itself along with 
a 5-Volt AC/DC Power Adapter and two AA batteries. There is also a mini-USB
cable for connecting the unit to a PC for use with the optional downloadable 
software, which allows you to review the prescription information on your
computer using speech, screen magnification, or a braille display. 
Additionally, the package includes a sample pill bottle, so you can practice 
using the
unit's controls before you receive your first RFID-tagged prescription. The 
ScripTalk Station documentation is available in braille, large print, and audio
CD.
A fully accessible PDF copy of the manual
 can also be downloaded from the company's website. The documentation was clear 
and concise and covered the device's operation in an easy-to-follow, 
step-by-step
manner. The page also includes an audio demonstration, so you can hear the 
device in action.

Physical Description

The ScripTalk Station is a semi-circular half-moon-shaped device that measures 
6.5 inches by 4.75 inches by 1 inch at its widest points, and it weighs
8 ounces. The housing is made of sturdy plastic, and there are five rubber feet 
on the bottom that provide a solid non-skid grip. The device is designed
to be used lying flat with the curved semicircular edge toward you, but there 
are also two notched screw holes on the back to accommodate wall mounting.

With the back edge of the device facing forward, from left to right you will 
find a mini USB jack, a 3.5 millimeter headphone jack, and the unit's power
adapter jack. The battery compartment is located on the bottom surface. A 
spring-release clip made it easy to find and open the compartment, and the 
batteries
were equally easy to install.

The device's curved front edge contains a single control: a thumbwheel that 
turns the unit on and off and controls the volume. On the top surface just
above the thumbwheel, there is a grouping of three buttons. The largest, which 
is the center button, is an oval-shaped "Read" button with a tactile dot
that makes it easy to locate. The smaller triangular button at the right is the 
"Previous" button and the similarly-sized triangular button on the left
is the "Next" button. Also on the top of the device is a horseshoe shaped 
semi-circle of tactile dots that surround the speaker grill and provide an 
easy-to-locate
space to position a prescription bottle for scanning.

The ScripTalk Label

The included sample medicine bottle is a typical 1 inch by 2.5 inch plastic 
cylinder with a push-and-twist type safety cap. Along with the standard 
prescription
label, there is a much smaller blank label affixed to the bottom of the bottle. 
A tiny bump no larger than a single braille dot covers the RFID chip, which
has been encoded by a participating pharmacist to hold all of the label data 
that is printed on the prescription bottle.

Operation

After installing the included batteries or connecting the power adapter, turn 
the thumbwheel to the left, and the unit switches on with a palpable click.
ScripTalk responds with three initialization beeps, a brief pause, and then a 
longer beep. This is followed by the voice announcement, "ScripTalk Station
ready," followed by two more beeps. The unit is now ready to scan and voice an 
RFID tagged prescription bottle.

At this or any other point, you can choose to listen to the documentation by 
pressing and holding the "Read" button for three seconds. Unfortunately, the
unit does not save your place or offer any section navigation or bookmarks, so 
every time you consult the onboard documentation, you must start again from
the beginning.

To scan a prescription label, position the tagged container on top of the unit 
inside the semicircle of tactile dots. Press the oval "Read" button. ScripTalk
beeps to indicate a scan is in progress, and almost instantly the unit begins 
speaking the label information.

You can also choose to press the "Read" button before positioning the labeled 
bottle. ScripTalk beeps steadily until it detects a talking label, and if
no label is found after 15 seconds, it responds with a "labeled prescription 
not found" error message.

The information ScripTalk voiced after scanning the sample prescription bottle 
included the following field names and data: patient name, the medication
name and strength, dosage instructions, the prescription date, the number of 
refills remaining, the prescriber's name, the phone number to use to call
in a refill, the prescription number, warnings and additional instructions, 
quantity, and the medication's expiration date.

The information is voiced from beginning to end, but the reading can be 
interrupted at any time by pressing the "Read" button a second time. After that
you can move down the list item by item up using the "Previous" and "Next" 
buttons located to either side of the "Read" button.

RFID chip transmissions only travel a few inches. Indeed, placing the bottle 
upside down caused ScripTalk not to be able to read the tag. For my evaluation
the company sent along a few extra sample prescription bottles, and when I 
placed one beside the unit and a second on top, ScripTalk only read the proper
bottle. I also tried setting two prescription bottles on top of the unit. 
ScripTalk continued to beep until I removed one of the bottles and, then, 
scanned
and voiced the information from the remaining bottle properly.

Voice Controls

ScripTalk uses the ScanSoft Heather voice. The company also produces a Spanish 
version of ScripTalk, which was not tested for this review. This unit does
not perform any translation, however. Rather, it is programmed to speak a 
prescription label printed in Spanish with the ScanSoft Paulina voice.

ScripTalk is programmed with five voice speeds. To change among them, press and 
hold either the "Previous" or "Next" button for three seconds. The different
speeds have no numbers or names, such as fastest or slowest. Instead, ScripTalk 
repeats these instructions: "Voice speed adjustment using the increasing
or decreasing speed." Press the "Previous" or "Next" button repeatedly until 
you reach the desired setting, then press the "Read" button to save your 
changes.

One step below the slowest voice setting is the unit's spell mode. Selecting 
this option causes ScripTalk to continue to voice the various heading names
(Name, Medication, etc.) word by word, but the field data itself will be voiced 
slowly and letter by letter. The sample bottle is tagged to contain the
popular antibiotic amoxicillin, and each letter voiced clearly. At the highest 
volume levels, ScripTalk's built-in voice began to grow a bit scratchy,
but it was still quite understandable.

It would be handy to be able to change the Spell Mode and Voice Speed settings 
on the fly, but when I tried pressing the "Read," "Previous," or "Next"
buttons after confirming a speed or spell change, ScripTalk announced, "No 
prescription information is available. Please scan medication," and I was forced
to repeat the scan before I could hear the data letter by letter or using a 
different voice speed setting.

Privacy

ScripTalk only retains medication data for 30 seconds after you finish your 
review, so it's easy to prevent others from coming along behind you and 
obtaining
personal information. There is also a headphone jack, so you can listen to the 
information privately. I tried this feature with my Apple EarPods and was
disappointed to discover the information only played through one ear because 
the headphones are stereo, and the ScripTalk sound jack is mono.

Shutting Down

If ScripTalk is left on battery power for more than five minutes without being 
used, an audio reminder alarm will sound and repeat every 1.5 minutes. The
alert sounds through the unit's speakers even if you have headphones attached. 
It also plays at full volume no matter how the volume level is set, which
is a useful feature because during my testing I neglected several times to 
power down the unit and only realized this when I heard the alert from a 
different
room.

If you take medications just before bedtime and tend to be a bit forgetful, you 
may want to use the power adapter, so you don't have to get back out of
bed if you neglect to turn it off. If you take your medications just before you 
leave for work, you may also be at risk of forgetting to turn the device
off and running down your batteries. A more elegant solution the company might 
consider for an updated version would be a programmable control circuit
that could power the unit down automatically, much like the Victor Stream turns 
itself off after a period of inactivity or when the sleep timer runs out.

The ScripTalk Station Carrying Case

My review unit also included the optional ($19.99) logoed ScripTalk carrying 
case. This black fabric bag is approximately 8 inches by 10 inches by 4 inches
with a carrying handle and detachable shoulder strap. A zippered outer 
compartment is designed to hold the ScripTalk unit. Inside the zippered 
lunchbox-style
insulated bag, there is also a mesh inner pocket for a freezer pack, and 
there's enough room for plenty of medications and other personal care items.

The ScripTalk Software

Recently, the company introduced the ability to connect the ScripTalk Station 
to a Windows PC via the included mini-USB cable. The software is available
upon request, and it works on PCs running Windows versions 8 through XP Service 
Pack 3. (A Mac version is currently in development along with apps to run
on smartphones equipped with near field communication capabilities.)

The ScripTalk User software uses a standard Windows installer, so it is easy to 
get up and running. Connect ScripTalk to your PC via the supplied USB cable,
turn ScripTalk on, and you are ready to run the application software.

At startup you are presented with a Settings menu with three option controls. 
The first is the "Port Settings" field with a default button that, when pressed,
automatically makes the connection between ScripTalk and the software. The 
second setting is a checkbox you can use to decide if the ScripTalk User 
software
should start when Windows starts or if you would prefer to start the software 
manually. The third control, a combo box, determines how long the prescription
information will remain on your computer display before the built-in privacy 
controls remove it. The choices are 15, 30, 45, or 60 seconds. You can also
choose the "No Time Out" option, in which case prescription data is displayed 
until you close your browser tab or window.

The ScripTalk User software uses your default browser to display the 
prescription label information on a standard webpage created on your local 
system.
Your information is not shared or transmitted over the Internet. I tested the 
software using a Windows 7 64-bit Dell PC running Window-Eyes version 8.2
and both Internet Explorer version 10 and Firefox version 20. Happily, the 
webpages are created using basic HTML, so no matter what screen reader, screen
magnifier, or braille display you use, if you can read a standard webpage, you 
should have no trouble reviewing prescription information.

With the ScripTalk User software running, scan a prescription bottle as 
described previously. ScripTalk will voice the information as before, but after
three or four seconds, your browser will pop up and display the exact same 
information. I found it slightly annoying that even when connected to the PC
the ScripTalk Station continued to voice the information, causing a bit of 
auditory confusion as both the unit and my screen reader began voicing the same
information at different starting times, but I was able to silence the 
ScripTalk with a second press of the "Read" button.

The ScripTalk User software is a must-have for deaf-blind individuals and 
others who wish to access their prescription data via a braille display or 
screen
magnification. However, even if you are perfectly satisfied having your 
prescription label voiced by the ScripTalk Station, there is still a good reason
to install and run the software.

The prescription data webpage created by the ScripTalk User software includes a 
hyperlink to the medication's Patient Information Monograph. This 
fully-accessible
text version of the same booklet or insert pharmacists include with most 
medications is chock full of additional information about the medication, how
it works, how to take it, and what side effects may result.

Receiving a ScripTalk Station on Permanent Loan

For several years the Veterans Administration has been providing its sight 
impaired clients with free ScripTalk Stations, and they recently broadened their
program to include soldiers who return from combat with traumatic brain 
injuries that impair their ability to comprehend printed materials.

More recently, En-Vision America itself has begun providing units free of 
charge on a long-term loan as part of their Pharmacy Freedom Program. To 
qualify,
all you need to do is arrange to have your prescriptions filled by a 
participating pharmacy.
A complete list of participating pharmacies
 can be found on the company's website, which can be searched by state or zip 
code. I tried my own small town zip code, and the nearest brick and mortar
pharmacy was a Sam's Club nearly 25 miles away. However, the list also included 
five mail order services, including CVS Caremark, Kohl's Pharmacy & Homecare,
and Wal-Mart's mail order prescription service.

The Bottom Line

The ScripTalk Station does one job, and it does it well. Any quibbles I have 
with the design and feature set are minor and do not affect the device's 
usability.

The ScripTalk Station would be a valuable resource for many visually impaired 
and deaf-blind individuals. The free long-term loan broadens the device's
appeal significantly, but not everyone can benefit from it. My own health 
coverage, for instance, will soon involve a requirement that I use Express 
Scripts
for my prescriptions. Currently, they do not participate in the Pharmacy 
Freedom program, but hopefully, they and many other pharmacies will join soon
and make universal prescription label access a true reality.

Product Information

Product: ScripTalk Station
Price: Free
Available from:
En-Vision America, Inc
Phone: 1-800-890-1180

Comment on this article.

Author
Bill Holton
Article Topic
Product Evaluations and Guides
Share
Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
article end
Accessworld navigation region
Accessworld
list of 2 items
Back Issues
Contact AccessWorld
list end
Accessworld navigation region end

Advertising

Luxturna: voretigene neparvovec-rzyl for subretinal injection. Discover 
Luxturna. Spark Therapeutics, Inc.
Low Vision Simulators Plus VSRT (Pepper) Test LUV Reading Workbook
Learn NVDA

End of advertising
main region end

Take Action Today
Partner with us

Your organization can change the way the world sees blindness

Donate

Most of our funding comes from individuals, not corporate sponsors. Your 
support is vital!

Need our help?

Connect with our accessibility consulting team.

list of 11 items
AFB Home
About AFB
Research & Initiatives
News & Publications
Blindness & Low Vision
Take Action!
AccessWorld Magazine
JVIB
Helen Keller Archive
AFB Consulting
Contact Us
list end

Sign up for the AFB Newsletter
Email
Enter email
Sign Up

Follow Us
list of 4 items
Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
YouTube
list end

Partner Sites
Partner Sites list of 4 items
FamilyConnect®
CareerConnect®
VisionAware™
Braille Bug®
list end

© Copyright 2019 American Foundation for the Blind
Privacy Policy
-----Original Message-----
From: Gail Johnson via Cookinginthedark [mailto:cookinginthedark@acbradio.org]
Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 12:48 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Gail Johnson <gailj...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [CnD] freezing meat and labeling it

What’s the best way to label medication

Sent from my iPhone

> On Apr 19, 2019, at 11:59 AM, Richard Kuzma via Cookinginthedark 
> <cookinginthedark@acbradio.org> wrote:
>
> I use a pen friend label, but I have put them on business cards and
> then laminated them with a small laminator,
>
> I then punch a whole in the and use rubber bands to attatch them to
> the item in freezer.
>
> Then pen friend labels are protected from moisture since laminated and
> it works awesomely.
>
> I also have an id mate barcode scanner, which I made my own barcode
> labels and did the same business card thing and it works very well also.
>
> For the ones I barcoded I made a duplicate label and put it on a index
> card so I can just scan the index cards and see what I have to shccose
> from without rummaging in the freezer.
>
> Let me know if I can help any other way.
>
> rich
>
> _______________________________________________
> Cookinginthedark mailing list
> Cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
> http://acbradio.org/mailman/listinfo/cookinginthedark
_______________________________________________
Cookinginthedark mailing list
Cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
http://acbradio.org/mailman/listinfo/cookinginthedark


_______________________________________________
Cookinginthedark mailing list
Cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
http://acbradio.org/mailman/listinfo/cookinginthedark


_______________________________________________
Cookinginthedark mailing list
Cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
http://acbradio.org/mailman/listinfo/cookinginthedark


Reply via email to