myHandiQR myHandiQR

Use cases

Real situations where myHandiQR makes a difference, for the bearer, their family, and the person who scans. Choose a profile to explore the cases that concern them.

8 use cases

Older adult with early-stage Alzheimer's, 74 years old

Creator
Adult child
Reader
Doctor, pharmacist, shopkeeper
QR location
Laminated card in their wallet

The other person understands the situation right away and adapts how they communicate, without the person having to explain what they can no longer put into words.

Older adult with Alzheimer's, 78 years old

Creator
Caregiving partner
Reader
Passerby, police
QR location
Label sewn into the coat

In case of wandering or disorientation, someone can access the emergency information and the family's contacts.

See the case in detail

Adult with a cognitive disability, 22 years old

Creator
Parent or legal guardian
Reader
Anyone they turn to when they're stuck
QR location
Card in their wallet

The person can get help without having to explain out loud what they cannot put into words.

Older adult with early dementia, 81 years old

Creator
Adult child
Reader
Emergency services, on-call doctor
QR location
Card in their wallet, QR on their phone

Care staff reach the key information (treatments, contacts) without waiting for the family.

Teenager with dissociative experiences, 17 years old

Creator
Parent
Reader
School nurse
QR location
Sheet in the bag, shared with the school nurse

The nurse understands what a dissociative episode is and knows how to respond without calling emergency services unnecessarily.

Adult with a mild intellectual disability, 35 years old

Creator
Family guardian
Reader
Employer, administrative staff
QR location
Card in their wallet

The employer or the office understands the support needs without the person having to spell them out alone.

Older adult with profound deafness, 82 years old

Creator
Adult child
Reader
Doctor, shopkeeper, neighbor
QR location
Card in their wallet

The other person understands right away that they need to write things down or adapt how they communicate, instead of repeating themselves several times for nothing.

Adult with aphasia after a stroke, 58 years old

Creator
Partner
Reader
Doctor, emergency staff, pharmacist
QR location
Laminated card in the wallet

The other person understands that the individual cannot speak but understands everything, and adapts how they communicate instead of treating them as unable.

See the case in detail