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
An Arizona nursing home offers new ways to care for people with dementia.
Should we entrust the care of people in their 70s and older to artificial assistants rather than doing it ourselves?
A 16-year-old helps older clients with technology.
ALFA: The average resident of assisted living stays two years, entering at the age of 87.
Seniors and their adult children are hiring help to extend their time at home.
Fitbit has commercially launched its first wristworn activity and sleep tracking device, Fitbit Flex.
Ford SYNC health app, has air-pollution, asthma-alert and pollen-alerts. BMW checks steering wheel for perspiration.
Though lots of communities offer computer classes for older adults, the response has been mostly local and small-scale.
Health care costs are skyrocketing. Robots could help address both costs and manpower issues.
5 percent of households with broadband internet have at least one digital fitness device.
Study: depression is associated with subsequent vascular dementia and Alzheimer’s disease.
Community libraries are proactive and responsive to needs of an aging population.
Note the variation on the S4 of making the phone Easy Mode. Maybe this is the future.
Ciscneros: Housing challenges facing America’s seniors who want to "age in place."
AARP to sponsor StartUp Health research on digital health offerings for the 50+.
Many older adults still do not have affordable, high-speed connectivity at home.
Review: Remotely monitoring of the elderly. But is it different than QuietCare?
Nursing homes face looming retirements in the current workforce, in which one-fifth of workers are 55+.
Montessori Method for Dementia program used in Canadian day centres and nursing homes.
In Time’s poll, 1 in 4 people check their phone every 30 minutes, 1 in 5 every 10 minutes.