DIGI SOCIETY
Thoughts about digitalisation:
I work as a nurse in the social and health care sector at a private clinic. Digitalisation is significantly visible in working life today. My work is mainly laboratory work, where digitalisation is visible in everyday work. Without a computer or digital devices, I wouldn´t be able to do my job. In my work, customer work is still about encountering, as my job is to take blood tests on my clients or, for examble, perform lung tests on them, but without digital devices, the tests might not be possible at all or results would not be obtained.
Digitalisation makes it easier for customers to manage their own health issues through remote channels. Today, it is possible to get doctor’s or nurse’s appointments, counselling services or appointment booking services through remote channels. Such an invention will certainly contribute to alleviating the shortage of resources in the social and health care sector. Unfortunately, digitalization also has its downsides, for example in terms of data security. A customer’s health information may be threatened. It seems that quite often there are reports of denial-of-service attacks or data leaks. The caption of Andy Ye’s video was very telling: “Do you think your email is private?”. So. Few Internet users necessarily understand all the information collected about us and what kind of advertising is offered to us unless they think about it more carefully. It is worth being aware of data protection and your own internet skills.
About EU General Data Protection Regularion (GDPR):
Fortunately, data protection issues are constantly monitored and improved, and new things are learned. The EU’s General Data Protection Regulation protects individuals whose personal data is processed by public and private institutions. The individual can decide how his or her data is processed. The individual has the right to information and the individual may be forgotten, i.e. request the possible deletion of their data. I think it is a very good thing that the customer can decide how his or her personal data is processed. It may also be the case that the client’s choices may impair the progress of smooth treatment if the client forbids some of their health data from being visible, for example, between private and public medical institutions.
Chat GPT:
I asked Chat GPT how to support neuroatypical young people at school? This is not directly related to my work, but it is a topical issue in a family with children. In my opinion, Chat GPT gave a pretty comprehensive answer, although the question was not simple. First, the answer explained the form in which neuroatypicality can manifest, such as ADHD or autism spectrum disorder, etc. Then the question was answered as to what could be done in the school, for example, in terms of individualized curriculum, teaching adjustments, psychological support, etc. Next, I asked an even more difficult question: Why doesn’t a neuroatypical child get support at school? I was positively surprised by this answer as well. Again, there was a comprehensive answer to this question: lack of resources, lack of training, lack of recognition of the need for support, etc. Chat GPT is probably evolving all the time and answering increasingly complex questions better. All I wonder is what sources the answers come from. I wonder whether the sources will appear in the text in the future.
Self assessment:
I started the course by watching the assignment and videos. The videos were interesting. Challenges arose when I started creating pages for my blog. I’m still not really sure how I managed to create them. I haven’t written a blog before, so all this was new. The dexterity of Chat GPT surprised me. I’ve used AI quite a bit for anything in the past.
I commented: