Lifelong partners grapple with how and whether to stay together when one can’t care for the other.
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Researchers say that use of a personal health record portal offers potential in chronic disease management.
A discussion of the financial capacity to pay for services available in 2030 and reflection on the current market fragmentation.
According to IDC Health Insights, over the next four years the healthcare industry will make significant investments in key enablers to telemedicine.
From the Health Information Technology (HIT) point of view, health care in the home, one day.
Brian Dolan assesses Pew Research number (1 in 10) about adults and mobile health apps -- as positive.
A call to action to invest US dollars for Alzheimer's to change the 2020 bleak outlook for the disease.
Nursing home rates up 4.6% to $83,585/year, assisted living up 5.2% or $39,516/year.
Caring for aging parents and loved ones.
Numerous recommendations (including strength training) that can be started at any time to maintain mobility.
Characterizing the hospital charges (up to $18,000) of those with, among other issues, serious chronic diseases.
Microsoft Kinect -- first games, then video conferencing with grandma through hand gestures?
Joseph Coughlin (MIT AgeLab) Disruptive Demographics -- about the coming mobility gap.
Double or triple by 2050, a $7 billion self-test kit market, growing at 12 to 18% per year.
ZDNet picks up on the mass market versus channel of Sonamba, new wellness monitoring device.
Caring.com introduces Alzheimer's Steps&Stages assessment tool, reviewed here in the NY Times.
Lack of policy action now is predicted to create a world-wide crisis -- as always, an opportunity for technology vendors.
Shared housing -- one big house, for older women -- overriding the 'myth of rugged individualism.'
This seems like an obvious evolutionary step for passive activity and health monitoring.
Considering the other housing alternatives beyond CCRCs and staying in one's own home.
A worrisome gap between the tech haves and have-nots, by age.
More expensive than Skype and other choices, but according to Cisco, a better experience.
Who knew -- baby boomers like technology.
Study showed that retiring may have a negative effect on memory.