Hear or meet Laurie in one of the following:

Related News Articles

01/29/2025

Waterlily, a startup that aims to predict long-term care needs using artificial intelligence, secured $7 million in seed funding.

01/10/2025

Older adults age at different rates and need different technology at various stages.

01/09/2025

AARP's AgeTech Collaborative now has a family of nearly 180 start-ups that address a broad range of products and services. 

12/16/2024

Dealing with companies, customer service can take valuable time. Let your favorite AI bot come to the rescue.

12/04/2024

Study notes critical gaps in care and services that must be addressed to meet the growing demands of the aging population in the U.S. 

Monthly blog archive

You are here

Four factors underpin AI potential in health and home care

The US population is aging and will be needing more care. You read it every day in the popular press – the bad news about the 65+ and their future care burden and the good news about the 65+ and their wealth (22% of US spending in 2022). Even with wealth, older adults at some point in their lives will need some level of assistance. While professional care providers will play a key role, increasingly their work will be augmented by software -- apps, machine learning and conversational AI. Why?

  • Healthcare delivery is migrating away from hospitals. As care delivery and consumer expectations change, the traditional fee-for-service model has already morphed into the new era of health-care consumerism – a patient-organized mix of self-care, urgent care, and in-home care.  The last-ditch choices will be emergency room visit or long wait for a doctor visit.   Consider changes that have taken place in recent years that will drive growth in apps for self-care.

[Stay tuned for new report next month, AI and the Future of Care Work]

Categories