Every year, falls among older Americans result in about 3.6 million ER visits and 1.2 million hospital stays, costing roughly $80 billion.
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In home and in store - smart phones and tablets change the way consumers shop.
Remote controlling your house from your iPhone -- so now the home automation market will take off.
NYTImes: The new market of keyboardless computers is quickly becoming as confusing as that of the old-school PC.
The International Franchise Association says senior care is among the industry's highest-growth sectors.
Juniper says wearables will be a $1.5 billion market by 2014 (in two years), up from just $800 million this year.
While the technological capabilities have been in place since 2003, the market has not embraced the idea of eldercare robots.
Current occupancy stands at 89% -- and the average move-in age is 85 says Aaron Conley of capital advisory firm Third Act Solutions.
Vendors must demonstrate interest in acquiring them as customers.
"As video chat services like Skype and FaceTime grow more popular, many children think of Nana and Poppa as those people on the screen."
Asking people who don't need assistance now, the answer is yes, unless the tasks involve personal care or social activities.
50% of seniors and 57% of boomers are open to using self-monitoring, or remote health monitoring technology.
Note the presence of PERS and remote monitoring (not just disease) in the top five.
The LG deal brings Independa’s Angela software to televisions at three senior care communities, is pre-loaded on the televisions and is therefore television service provider agnostic.
Healthsense: Using technology can help retain residents in a community or in a certain level of care, rather than lose them to a more acute setting.
Startups offer low-cost sound amplification that threatens hearing aid industry.
Software for iPad or Android tablet - users communicate with each other via an animated brown dog named Buddy.
Of course, that same app can be tailored to alert others when trouble looms.
Brody: seniors may be missing out on a lot of e-health opportunities.
Meet entrepreneurs pioneering new products and services--or improving existing ones--for the fast-growing senior market.
Plans include postponing 3-5 years.
Quantifying the value of keeping a senior in town, the selectmen launch a telehealth program.
The potential market is vast, investors in the sector face cultural, as well as financial and administrative, barriers.
Bill Novelli: If we act now, we can actually create a world where aging is a boon and not a burden.