With the popularity of technologies such as smart speakers and smart boilers, the concept of the "smart home" has become a universally recognized reality. Technology adoption is also evolving rapidly, with older age groups (55-70 years old) becoming more knowledgeable about smart home technology and willing to adopt different products to support and improve their daily living needs.
However, smart home technology doesn't stop there. The potential for families to use assisted care solutions is enormous. The latest generation of assistive technologies can not only deal with problems such as fires and gas leaks, but also provide smarter enhancements to people's lives, such as related sensors such as dispensers.
Especially in older or vulnerable places, smart home solutions and assistive technologies should be installed and used, which will help improve their quality of life while also having an impact on their health and well-being. Technology is a driving force, and as more families utilize assisted care solutions and implement human-centered care, it will make day-to-day monitoring more effective and independent.
For example, the use of WiFi will increase connections with friends and family, reduce social isolation, and provide online activities and services that can improve well-being. Technology can also improve the efficiency of communication between users and providers, such as using applications for reporting.
Smart home technology should always be centered on the needs of the end user to provide the right care at the right time. Businesses must work with people using smart home technology to develop and deploy technology to help them live the lives they choose and maintain their independence.
While more and more people are adopting smart home technology and enjoying its benefits, there is still some way to go before its potential is widely understood.
A lack of understanding often hinders the adoption of smart home solutions because many people don't realize that technology is human-centered and designed to meet a range of needs. Adopting smart home solutions can often greatly improve the quality of life of users. The range of available products and services is also often unknown, leading providers and users to avoid investing in assistive technologies.
Technology providers must work with society and healthcare professionals as well as end users to ensure the full potential of the technology is harnessed. Individual products, digital transformations, cost benefits, and innovations must be better understood to enable assistive technologies to give vulnerable people more control over their lives.
With the social and healthcare sectors at a financial turning point, it can be challenging to encourage home care providers, health and social care professionals, and end users to invest in smart home solutions, such as assistive technologies. Products such as personal care packages and human-centered solutions are often considered expensive and, as noted above, the benefits are often not understood or seen as exceeding the cost of the investment.
As our population grows and ages, the demand for services such as the NHS(the National Health Service, the tax-funded public health service in the UK), which is already stretched, is increasing. Assistive technologies play a key role in increasing capacity and increasing flexibility to meet individual needs and ensure more proactive and predictable care. Technology can enable new models of care by supporting integration, enabling prevention, and empowering people to manage themselves at home.
The latest smart home solutions and assistive technologies are no longer just passive, but can monitor and recognize behavior patterns. Devices around the home are easy to understand and can monitor and record activities, such as when a particular room is visited and when someone goes to bed. The data is then analyzed and developed into easy-to-read graphs to map behavior, such as someone's ability to move, how they sleep, eat, or bathe, and whether it changes over time.
This data is available via a smartphone app, thus enabling professionals or family members to quickly and easily monitor the daily life of an elderly person or a young child. This can help identify the care and support that may be needed, for example, an increase in bathroom visits indicating a heightened likelihood of a urinary tract infection can be treated quickly at home with antibiotics to avoid progression to a more serious illness that may even require hospitalization.
Assistive technologies can also enable remote health monitoring. Patients can take vital sign readings at home using medical-grade peripherals and fill out personalized health questionnaires using an app on their phone or tablet. A professional monitoring center will then receive the data via secure transmission, allowing them to process and evaluate the results.
Anything other than the parameters set for a particular patient triggers an alert and is color-coded according to the level of risk. Professionals can then be contacted under local protocols and data can be accessed remotely to gain valuable insights into patient trends.
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