About 74% of middle-aged and senior Americans would have very little to no trust in health info generated by AI.
You are here
Related News Articles
New Ford Edge will recognize complete addresses, including city and state spoken in a single phrase, and respond by offering turn-by-turn directions.
ConsultADoctor, interviewed for Aging and Health Technology report and RetireLife.Net included.
New defibrillator communicates directly with the doctor -- up next, that advises medication modifications.
Often resulting in death or dementia after leaving the hospital, doctors now see delirium as a condition to watch and prevent.
AARP celebrates 67-year-old woman's 'escape' from nursing home into her own apartment with the help of a long list of service providers and government-funded programs.
Our worst nightmare -- the robotic seal enters the dementia units.
Gliding a finger across the virtual keyboard to spell words -- now on 7 smartphones in the US.
When a device continues to work long after any quality of life remains.
Revamping nursing homes -- adding music, strength training, computers, cognitive fitness -- to appeal to an aging population.
NY Times blog post about Gallup poll notes spending is up among the two groups.
New startups (home care, transportation, and others) aim to serve North Jersey seniors, but find selling a slow process.
Experts try to make sense of one study (happy after 50) to another study (increase in boomer suicides).
Jitterbug announces that it has grown its Live Nurse service to 12,000, averaging 4000 calls per month.
Biomedical Reports expects shares of ActiveCare to rise based on growth in PERS market.
New AARP study confirms that 25% of those 50+are using Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter.
Using products from Philips, VRI, and CardioCom -- as well as Skype for video conferencing.
Studies about employers and caregiving, age and well-being.
To compete with HomeTrak and Santrax, new online service aims to find home care agencies to try out its software.
Including a long-distance family member via video during a doctor consultation.
A look at future -- how technology changes will dramatically alter the way we age.
A chance to take a look at the 'winning' ideas.
More on Gallup poll indicating that after age 50, people get happier as they get older.
Optimal cholesterol, blood pressure, no diabetes -- means your arteries may be younger than you.
Jeffrey Immelt talks about future GE role in treatment of chronic diseases in the home -- in Japan (22% over age 65).