Sunday, January 31, 2010

PSA-IMPORTANT HEARING REMINDER

"Did you know that when MP3 players are purchased as gifts, the majority of purchasers are moms? That finding emerged at the Mommy Tech summit at the recently concluded Consumer Electronics Show.

But do you know about the potential risks? Kids often don't know how to use audio technology safely and they can harm their hearing as a result. In fact, hearing loss among young people is reported to be on the rise and there are strong concerns that a generation of young people could end up with prevalent hearing loss.

"For some time, the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) has warned that hearing loss in the United States could rise significantly due to the misuse of personal audio technology," ASHA President Tommie L. Robinson, Jr. explains. "Unfortunately, a report released today by the Kaiser Family Foundation cites some alarming trends about excessive entertainment media consumption among our nation's children, indirectly supporting ASHA's concerns. This should be a warning to parents that they must regulate children's exposure and fully understand the potential health threats associated with misuse and over exposure to such technologies."

"ASHA will continue to bring these issues to the forefront and appreciates the Kaiser Family Foundation's contributions to the national dialogue," Robinson adds.

According to a 2004 study by the Kaiser Family Foundation, children were reported as being exposed to 6 hours and 21 minutes of media (TV, music, internet, etc) per day. By 2009, this statistic had increased dramatically to 7 hours and 38 minutes per day. When media multitasking is taken into account, this leaps to 10 hours and 45 minutes per day. This massive consumption of media has led to decreased grades in school and ASHA contends it puts kids at an increased risk of hearing loss.

One thing that is clear from the study is that parents can be very positive influencers on how their children use entertainment media.

How You Can Help - Spread the Following Message

Whether your child received an MP3 player, gaming device, cell phone, laptop, or any other device with headphones, don't overlook the important health threat of hearing loss. Now is the time to reach out to other parents about the importance of hearing loss prevention, the damaging effects of excessive media consumption, and the resources available to them through ASHA.
Here are two simple ways to protect your children's - and your own - hearing.

· Keep the volume down. A good guide is half volume.
· Limit listening time. Give your hearing 'quiet breaks'.

Find more information and statistics at ASHA's website. You can also follow their Twitter feed or fan them on Facebook to get real time updates on their work."
-Amy Lupold Bair

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Microwave On Clearance at Walmart that Talks!

The talking microwave is great for the blind and visually impaired. It is something that you would normally pay a premium price on, right now Walmart has it on clearance for $79.
Talking Microwave Link

According to the site,
"The Cook Magic talking microwave verbally guides you through your cooking with just the touch of a button. Ideal for the sight-impaired, you can program the voice to speak in English or Spanish. The ten power levels, eight preset functions for common foods and five memory setting buttons save time and make cooking easy.


Cook Magic 0.9 cu. ft. Talking Microwave, Silver:

0.9 cu. ft.
900 watts
Easy to use instructive talking feature in English or Spanish
Ideal for the sight-impaired
Ten power levels
Eight preset functions for common foods
Five express cook one-touch settings
Five memory setting buttons
Digital display with clock
Turntable
Time cook
Time and weight defrost
Remind signal
Kitchen timer"

Finding great off the shelf deals like this are ideal for people with disabilies. Why not take advantage of it?