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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Yet another term -- FCC coins, Continua endorses.
Family members use some caregiving tools to help them care for aging parents.
Information Week writes about tech at Aging in America.
Including PARO, the robotic pet, Cyberdyne's HAL, and graveyard webcams.
Gee, younger boomers are more likely to use smart phones than older boomers.
Lifeline introduces automatic fall detection to its PERS product line.
Supported by Selfhelp services, the components for this 'virtual senior center' include magnification and an enlarged keyboard.
Sustainable design, universal design, technology, age of amenities, at-home services, NORCs and virtual villages, empowerment, memory care, and new ways of financing.
Sensecam measures movement and takes digital pictures to jog failing memory.
SelfHelp launches virtual senior center for 6 homebound New Yorkers.
Tuscaloosa's program to teach seniors who 'may not know a Twitter from a Yahoo' about computers.
Americans age 55 and above started 18.9 percent of all businesses created in 2008.
FCC plan calls for $25 billion in new broadband funding, including goal to "expand 100 megabit per second service to 100 million homes by 2020."
Projecting our own fears and prejudices onto those in late life.
Express Scripts is testing GlowCaps -- automated reminder from the pillbox itself.
VHA continues telehealth deployment in California with Bosch's Health Buddy.
Philips study proves that home monitoring for those with severe heart failure can improve their lives.
A recent AARP study of D.C. seniors who joined "aging-in-place" networks say the move has made them feel more engaged in their communities and more comfortable with their decision to stay in their homes.
""I feel like I'm disconnected from knowing what's going on," says a retired business school teacher.
Although 80% of doctors rely entirely on a paper trail, is now the time for electronic medical records?
Firms launch a year-long study on home monitoring for those with chronic diseases.
The apocalypse now -- boomers use too much healthcare...or everyone uses too much?