2nd annual diabetes mine design challenge.

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In the spirit of design matters, check out the wonderful 2nd annual diabetes mine design challenge. It's this kind of activism and vision that can bring about real change. I imagine somebody out there in the world, putting pen to paper as we speak, designing something that wouldn't have been designed before, something that will make our lives better, thanks to this challenge. One person, one challenge, one solution can bring about so much progress and positive change. Much thanks to amy for leading the charge!

Let the designing begin!

just because I have a chronic illness doesn't mean I don't have good taste.

I've said it before and I'll say it again, design matters. Just because I have a chronic illness doesn't mean I don't have good taste. In that spirit, here are a few recent finds of products and prototypes that are shining examples of how medical stuff doesn't have to be clinical or ugly or boring. Say it loud sister!

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This beautiful rfid medical alert bracelet prototype by doria fan makes my heart go pitter pat. I'd wear this beauty in a flash if given half the chance. Groovy, pretty and functional, what more could a girl ask for in a medical alert bracelet?

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These beautiful alternatives to the usual over the counter drugs and bandages we use in our everyday lives come from the company help. Smart and simple design, elegant packaging and a wonderful philosophy behind the company, I know which bandage I'd pick if I had the choice. "While some health problems are large, complicated and frightening, most aren't the end of the world. A kind word and a little help can get you on your way again. Help Remedies was created to make solving simple health issues simple. We find the best solution there is, and take away everything else. By stripping away some of the complexity and fear mongering of the health industry, we hope to make the category friendlier and more accessible, and in doing so empower people to make their own health decisions. We think a little help, honesty and kindness will go a long way." Amen!

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And finally, how cool is this simple, modern, sassy container by urchin for all the unending diabetes supplies I need to have hanging around? I love it's straightforwardness, it's overt utility. I love the fact that something like this makes no apologies for it's contents or job. Take that embarrassment! Bye bye shame. Hello groovy modernity. Hello groovy diabetes girl.

noisy momentum.

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In my last post I spoke of a momentum I've been feeling around the idea of better design in the medical realm. The more I think about it, the more I think that something's afoot in the greater world of medicine and design. Something's definitely happening and I'm pretty excited about it to say the least.

Consider what the architect Michael Graves said of his first impressions of the hospital he found himself in after he became paralyzed and wheel chair bound in this Metropolis article written by John Hockenberry: "He likes to tell the story about how during the worst days of pain and uncertainty he pleaded to anyone who would listen not to let him die amid so much ugliness. After a lifetime of seeking beauty in everything he designed and obsessively making sure every detail in his physical space was selected to be purposeful and beautiful, he was suddenly trapped in a world of mundane medical objects. “Everything was ugly,” he says. “Nothing was designed. It seemed as though the makers of these objects never had to use them. There was no color, no style; nothing about any of the objects said that a human had made them. It was outrageous.” Graves said he once had his doctor come into his hospital bathroom, where he was trying to shave from his wheelchair: “ ‘Who designed these bathrooms?’ I asked him. He said, ‘Experts.’ I said, ‘Oh, really,’ and I had him sit down and look at himself in the mirror, which was too high, and then turn on the water, which was out of reach. It took him two seconds to get it." Graves, at another point in the article, articulates beautifully something that gets to the heart of the issue of design in the medical realm: "People who become disabled have to radically redesign their outlook about the physical world. They redesign their sense of privacy and their sense of independence. Yet in the products they have to use, design has abandoned them."

Amen.

Or consider what Virginia Postrel so beautifully articulated in this recent post (where she also kindly linked to a recent post on aiming for grace): "The more I think about the sorry state of health care aesthetics, the more I think part of the problem is that we have an "acute care" model of medicine in a world where chronic diseases are increasingly the rule. If you only go to the doctor occasionally, you won't care nearly as much about how things look as you will if you're spending a large part of your life in clinics of various sorts. The same is true of medical devices. A diabetic who uses a pump all the time for life will benefit far more from something that looks good than someone who has a one-time, or even short-term, encounter with some kind of medical gizmo." So insightfully put! Design matters more when you have to interact more with designed stuff. Especially when you have it interact with it 24/7. Especially when you have to use the stuff to live. Especially when you have no choice.

Amen again.

What occurs to me is that all this talk, this momentum if you will, is a result of a number of interesting, converging factors beyond the simple conversation about design. The first factor, and in my mind the biggest, is an idea I've touched on before after reading Jill Sklar's great book. When you look at the long history of human life and disease, the state of chronic illness is really a very new thing. Before the last century, people pretty much got sick and then they died. These were the times before antibiotics, insulin, vaccines, widespread understanding of hygene. These were most certainly the times before the internet or the human genome project. In the context of human history, the last 100 or so years are but a blip, and the state of living a life with a chronic illness is really a thoroughly modern phenomenon. It's an unprecedented, revolutionary thing. Science has made this modern state possible, but as is often the case with life altering innovation or breakthrough, the cultural institutions of the society, the technology surrounding the science and the realm of design, all follow behind.

The idea and experience of chronic illness is "new" when looking at the big picture of human history. Yet, as Virginia Postrel mentioned in her post, we live in a time where living life with a chronic illness or condition is becoming more commonplace. Again, thanks to advances in medicine and science, we are living longer than ever before in history, meaning that most people will be managing some kind of health condition at some point in their lives. An article by Thomas Goetz from yesterday's NY Times magazine put it perfectly, "As we learn more about disease and are able to identify it earlier, more and more Americans will fall under the rubric of 'patient'". Or as a woman quoted in that same article says, "Pretty much everybody I know over 45 has some kind of medical condition. Some people have had cataracts surgery, or they have high blood pressure, or high cholesterol or diabetes. Everyone has something. And if everyone has something, that really levels the playing field." The sheer weight and volume of more people living in that state of being, also contributes to a new awareness of the issues people with chronic illnesses face. I would posit that the result of this fact is an emerging awareness, a new sense of urgency and most importantly, a higher level of demand for a better experience around life with chronic illness.

Another key factor in this possible new momentum is of course the internet. At it's best the internet connects people who are sharing an experience such as chronic illness, allows them to share information, insight and feelings, and over time, amplifies their voice in ways never before possible. I know that's happened to me personally in writing this blog. At first it was such a revelation and joy to find others who knew the strange world of diabetes that I inhabited. Then over time, I found my voice change and become stronger as I not only understood that I wasn't alone in my journey but that my feelings and ideas about that journey were valid and true. My view of my experience became more real and as it did, my ability to analyze it and express it with some distance and clear insight got greater. For years I was stuck in the isolated and singular place of being one person with a chronic illness, lonely and struggling to fit in to a "normal" world I was no longer a part of. Thanks to the internet and blogging, I no longer feel alone and I now have a new philosophy about normalcy. A new normalcy. My idea of this new normalcy is defined by being whole with disease, rather than feeling less than whole because of it. I can't help but think that this personal journey is happening all over the internet, between blogs and forums like the diabetes OC, tudiabetes or diabetes daily, and media channels like dLife, and open source medical information websites like PatientsLikeMe, to name just a few examples. All these isolated, single individuals experiencing chronic illness, disease and physical limitations, are now starting to collectively add up to an amplified picture, source of insight and in the end, a much harder voice to ignore. It's definitely getting louder out there!

Given all of these factors, the relative "newness" of the chronic illness state in society, the fact that more e people are living in this state of chronic illness thanks to the advances in medicine and science and the compounding, amplifying ability of the internet, it feels like times just might be beginning to change. This convergence of factors might mean that the experience of disease will be considered as important as the science of it. It might mean that a new definition of normalcy can emerge in the process of this evolution. The momentum around new normalcy and better design and patient voice feels real to me. It feels hopeful and progressive to me. It feels like there's certainly a lot more noisy conversation on the way. And that can only be good in the long run.

I heart Virginia.

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Don't you love it when you start to see some gaining momentum around an idea you really care about. Or at least the fact that there are other people out there who feel the same way you do. And they have a clear and articulate voice. And they happen to write for a big, national magazine. Well I love it, that's for sure! 3 huge, loud, happy cheers for Virginia Postrel's latest column, the art of healing at the atlantic. Yes, yes, yes, "aesthetics can make for happier, and healthier patients". Yes, design does matter. My favorite line in the whole amazing, smart article is, "why assume good medicine must come with bad design?" Why indeed. "If you have a choice and you can be in a place full of light, where there’s beautiful art that your eyes can rove over and feel comfort from—which would be a better experience, assuming they both are the same [medically]? And why don’t we think people deserve that?" Exactly! Who deserves better design more than people who have to live with medical treatment and procedures to save or sustain their lives? We deserve better design, because we have to show up for treatment to live. We have to be there, so why not have it be as pleasant as possible on all levels?

Why not, indeed.

Image from wirt design.

aiming for grace: 20 things I know about diabetes.

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I owe Amy a big thank you for her kind review of my new little book aiming for grace: 20 things I know about diabetes. To be honest, I'm feeling a bit funny about even talking about it. More than anything, making this series of posts into a self published book has been a terrific exercise, a healing process, to be honest. The fact that there's a book that people can have if they'd like, is a very nice result of a personal exercise that's been helpful and positive to me as an individual. Making something from nothing has always really helped me for some reason. A piece of art, a story, a blog post, a book. Taking an idea or feeling from inside and pushing it outward into a real form that I can see and feel has always made sense to me. It's always made hard things less difficult to deal with.

That was the core idea behind the aiming for grace exercise I did a couple of years ago to commemorate my 20th anniversary of living with diabetes. It was so very helpful, 20 posts over a 2 week period. Surprises and revelations that I hadn't expected, confirmation and celebration of what I'd learned so far. It helped so much to see the ideas rather than just think them. Doing the exercise did exactly what I had hoped it would by creating a milestone and documentation of all that I knew so far. It honored my journey for myself.

After doing the exercise on my blog, I decided to make 10 one-off copies and have them bound in a book format to give to my family and friends and doctors, to acknowledge their help in my journey and to thank them for their support. There was something so amazing about take the idea further, from inside my head, onto the blog with it's virtual format I could see, to a book format I could touch and feel. The process somehow made the ideas feel more real to me and just as importantly, it gave the people who received the book a chance to interact with the ideas in a more intimate and personal way. I don't know what it is about books, but there's something about the weight and feel of a story in your hands, physically revealed with each turn of the page, each picture and phrase. Everyone, to the person, commented on how they had learned something more about diabetes because of the book, a result quite frankly I hadn't expected. These were people who knew the disease well or at the very least, knew me well, and yet because of the format, were able to interact and understand diabetes at a different level. Who knew?

Since I went through the exercise of making the one off books, some amazing technology has come to be. In the last couple of years the ability to self publish has become possible in unprecedented and relatively affordable ways. Thanks to services like Blurb, iPhoto book, and Lulu to name a few, it's fairly easy now to publish one's own content in a beautiful, professional way. Each company has a interface that makes it possible to drop your content into their format and then for a price, based on size, number of pages, and whether it's hard or soft cover, they will produce the book for you. Simple as that.

So what's happened is that the insight from my experience with making the aiming for grace exercise into a book has combined with this happy new technology of self publishing and voila, my little book was born. I kept thinking about how people internalized the ideas differently in a book format and I thought that other people might like to have the choice to see the story that way too. All the original content still lives on the site and can be read anytime here. What's fun is that now if someone wants to have it in a swell book format, they can have it that way too.

this is the aesthetic of diabetes.

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This is the aesthetic of diabetes. Black, grey, blue for color. Hard plastic surfaces, nylon fabric for bags, clear transparent screens for data interface. Big digitized numbers, small point type for information, big buttons with white circles for text and blunt, graphic arrows. Blocky, thick rectangles and squares, semi-streamlined curves and chunky forms and shapes and dimensions. Translucent tubing and packaging, glowing backlit lighting and lot's and lots and lot's of numbers. Piles of plastic. Tons of paper boxes. These are our pictures from the diabetes made visible pool that show the story of what we live and interact with everyday.

1. Okay, Go!, 2. Double check the code, 3. Day 106 16th February '08, 4. CGM and monitor comparison, 5. 6 February 2008 Day 121, 6. 2nd Part of the Status Screen, 7. blood glucose monitor kit, 8. A Drop of Insulin - Day 17, 9. 100_0026, 10. in my pocket, 11. Not Fun, 12. CamBag4Pump, 13. HIGH, 14. Really Low, 15. Dexcom 3 and Dexcom 7 STS nine-hour screens, 16. DSCN4561, 17. November 18, 2007 - diabetes365 - day 41, 18. Day 11 - 11/11/2007: My New Toy, 19. DSC03416.JPG, 20. DSC02368.JPG, 21. Morning Meter - Day 49, 22. Getting ready to insert the new infusion set... - Diabetes365 - Oct. 20, 2007, 23. Diabetes365, Day 1, 16 Oct '07, 24. Diabetes 365 day 100(a): Sunday, January 20, 2008, 25. in my pocket

you say tomato, I say toma(h)to.

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I had the recent good fortune of doing a personality profile test as a team building exercise at work. I have to admit that I love these kind of things. I'm sure it's not a perfect science or anything, but who isn't at least a little interested in finding out some more about themselves? And I'm sorry, these things can be eerily accurate, like someone's been listening in on your thoughts, and taking damn good notes in the process. Cue the Twilight Zone music. Really. It was weird and fun and very revealing.

The purpose of this exercise is to help us understand the places we naturally go to in terms of interaction, communication, dealing with stress, problem solving and expression, among other things. And more importantly, it's designed to help us understand that others have their own natural places that they go to, and as such, there might be a different way to deal with different people in the same situation. One person's way of coping isn't necessarily their co-worker's way of coping. Not a big surprise, but when looked at as a group, it's a very enlightening, helpful and at the end of the day, great team building exercise. At least I found it so.

Now this isn't about personality tests per se, but rather the idea about how a given personality can deal with the same experience differently. Or more importantly, one personality might deal with certain parts of that same experience really well, while another personality, not so much. Like with diabetes. Take for example, the need to document blood sugar results. I'm most certainly not an engineering type so the tedious details, the charting, the minutea of this disease absolutely drives me up the wall. I feel burdened and boxed in by it. I hate it the most of all the parts of dealing with this disease, hands down. But someone else who's personality is suited for that kind of thing, might find solice or a feeling of power in doing the tracking and watching the details. They might actually like it. Which raises a important question for me about personality + diabetes. How does one personality type deal with the same disease state vs. another? Do our doctor's even think about this when they roll out the "how to do diabetes" tutorial, hand us those carb counting charts and send us on our way? It feels like there's basically one protocol for approaching the management of this disease and it seems like it's pretty much one size fits all to me. Obviously there is stuff that has to be done to manage this disease, but that doesn't mean that the protocol couldn't be designed in a way that frames it more organically and in sync with different personality types. No charts and graphs for my type, but maybe more of a goal oriented, milestone strategy for me. For someone more meticulous, it's a formating and pattern recognition exercise. Same goal (testing and overall better control), different framing and systems to get there. A protocol approach that aligns with a person's"natural" tendencies or personal style. Wouldn't that be amazing?

Now, I'm not talking about doing this just because it'd be nice. I'm talking about this approach to diabetes management protocol because it sets each individual up for better success. Tailoring the individual approach to diabetes to insure a higher likelihood for initial compliance and long term health. That seems smart to me. I'm struck with the fact that so much of figuring this stuff out is up to us, which is random at best. It's hard to develop a good strategy from inside your own experience and head. I happen to work at a place that realizes the need and merits of insight into personality because it translates into higher productivity and effectiveness of a team. And they don't expect us to sit around figuring it out for ourselves on top of doing our jobs. This idea makes even more sense to me when we're talking about our health. Higher productivity (compliance) and more effectiveness (better control) means better results overall. Better diabetes results. That's the goal, right?

So I'm sitting here imagining that a newly diagnosed person might go to their doctor one day, to get their blood tests, their A1C, their new diet plan and a personality test. "OK, so you're this type of a person, madam, so here's how to approach your diabetes care", framed up in a way that makes the most sense to her. Imagine how cool that would be. Imagine what a difference that could make. Imagine.


design really does matter.

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A friend of mine tore out this article from the magazine business week for me the other day. First of all, how nice of her to think to do so, though I'm sure that, in part, it's because she's sick of me yammering on about how annoyed I am with the design (or lack thereof) of my pump. I'm not exactly a shrinking violet on that subject as you all know.

But whatever the reason, I was very grateful to her and immediately started to read it with both hope and trepidation. The title alone was pretty intriguing: my ipod, my cell, my insulin pump. Sounds familiar, right Amy? The second line of the title also showed promise: medical device makers are taking cues from user-friendly tech gadgets. Ok, ok, so were they about to reveal some new breakthrough in pump design that I hadn't heard of yet I wondered? I scanned the page as fast as my eyes could read. But unfortunately, it turned out that the answer was a most definite no. No breakthroughs, no revelations, just the same old posture that pumps are amazing technical feats (which they are) and there is new grooviness on the horizon with the advent CGM technology (check). It was more of an outsiders look at the stuff we all live with everyday. Cool that it was being written about, but sadly, nothing new for me.

I read on. The next paragraph talked about "the new role of design" in the medical products world. That sounded intriguing to me. They framed up how medical device companies are teaming up with industrial designers and seeking inspiration from consumer products to make their products more appealing to us. Hm. I wonder when exactly that teaming up is happening. In a nutshell the article posited that medical devise companies are now aware that with better design, people will be more likely to manage their disease effectively as well as prompt more customer loyalty to their brands. Yep, makes sense to me. Which led to a favorite quote in the article stating that design had "become a 'primary focus,' says Dr. Alan Marcus, global director of medical affairs at Medtronic. 'We're actively moving in that direction.'" Actively moving in that direction. What exactly does that mean? According to my pump rep, it doesn't mean anything aesthetically at least, given the fact that, according to him, any change, functionally or aesthetically means having to go through the FDA approval process again. Which means there isn't a whole lot of incentive for a pump company with an existing design to redesign for aesthetics or user interface any time soon.

But what I found most interesting about the article wasn't the rehash of stuff we already know as people living with these gadgets day in and day out. What was interesting to me was that there were some research data that spoke to the role of good design and medical compliance and behavior in a quantitative, statistical way. Design is so often dismissed as extra, "nice to have" component rather than a critical, integral part of making a functional and effective product or tool. The study this article references at least broaches that misconception. "Recent research bears out Baldwin's assertion that design can influence how a patient deals with his disease. At a meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes in Amsterdam, Italian researchers said they looked at quality-of-life issues for 1,341 patients with type 1 diabetes. They found people who used pumps such as the PRT System experienced 70% less therapy-related dissatisfaction than those who repeatedly inject themselves." Ok, so they're comparing pump therapy to shot therapy but still, it's a start. There is a correlation between design and behavior which is totally cool. It's saying that the technology and quality one uses to manage this disease impacts the experience, approach and behavior in living with it. It isn't a huge leap to imagine that if it was a matter of choosing between a beautifully designed, elegant, object of desire, well engineered pump and a clunky, brick-like, 1970's-esq pager style, well engineered pump we'd be looking at a very different business landscape on our hands. I'd of course, never trade off on trustworthy function, but assuming that's a given (which I think is fair at this point), I know which pump I'd choose.

Anyway, off I climb from my design soapbox yet again. In the end, it's great to see an article like this in a major magazine. A magazine, by the way, that's talking about diabetes from a business angle, rather than a medical one. A magazine that is acknowledging the business advantages that great design creates. A magazine that frames us up as consumers with the ability and desire to choose products that best address our needs rather than sad patients who get what they're given. I like that. I like that a lot.

stranger than fiction.

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Have you seen the wonderful movie stranger than fiction? Beyond the fact that it is a terrific story in it's own right, the use of information graphics as an overlay at the beginning (at the first half of this video clip) reminds me a lot of what life is like with diabetes. I'd love to see diabetes framed up this way. Boring, everyday activities, that we do like everyone else, layered with all the calculations and science and data and math of diabetes. It's a great concept they've laid out in this film. I just love it when something can show a better picture of the reality of life with this disease.

Hm, I feel a project coming on. I'd love to see a short video of a person with diabetes eating a meal and using all the information that goes through their mind before, during and after, as an overlay to the film. Blood test results, carb counting of food, ratios of carbs to insulin and bolus amounts calculated, numbers of units actually taken, time before insulin hits the blood sugar, glycemic index data, rates of the rise of blood sugar. You know, the stuff we deal with every day. Every meal. Every hour. Wouldn't it be compelling to see it that way? I wonder what people would think? I wonder if people would realize a little more, that what we do, can be at times, most certainly stranger than fiction?

opposites made whole.

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In the spirit of living well with chronic illness, I've been thinking about what that end state actually looks like. When I look at the diabetes made visible pool, I am so moved by the strangeness of all the stuff we use to manage this disease, juxtaposed with the regularness of our lives. Weird medical objects and then our other life stuff. As I think about living in between the definitions of health and illness, I'm struck with the need to make a picture of what healthy with diabetes looks like for myself. I'm a visual person after all, so I want an image of the goal. Healthy with diabetes.

Healthy first. But with diabetes too. For me, there has to be an acknowledgement and visibility of what it takes to do this disease well. To do it at all. My picture of healthy with diabetes needs to include the reality of my life with this disease. It's not devoid of the blood tests and a1c's and carb counting and pumps. It's not as if I could be healthy without all that stuff. No, for me the picture includes that stuff and honor's all the hard choices and vigilance and determination it takes to do this disease with eye's wide open.

Because I'm a designer, the world of objects matter for me. Things, objects tell stories to me. As I've begun to think about this idea, I've gravitated to that world of things, to help draw myself this picture I'm in search of. This funny cup and this wonderful handmade toy are a couple of examples of what come to mind for me when I think about what healthy with diabetes looks like. It's a first step, and maybe too obvious in it's expression, but regardless, these things speak to me now. They're pretty and funny and delightful because they embrace medicalness (symbolized by the red cross) AND good design (porcelain and gold gilt; whimsical fabric and button wheels). There's a confident, happy presence about these objects. And they're special because they embrace what at first feels oxymoronic. Pretty and medical? Playful and serious? They embody opposite states to make a new whole. Like I do. Healthy and chronically ill. Opposites that when seen together in one place, are compelling and surprising. New forms. Modern forms. Opposites made whole.

Hm. Now that's an idea that helps makes the picture a little clearer.

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(PS. I unfortunately have lost the links to the above featured objects. A thousand apologies to the designers who made them.)