About 74% of middle-aged and senior Americans would have very little to no trust in health info generated by AI.
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Barriers cited: privacy and security concerns, licensing and credentialing, connectivity, and questions about the regulatory approach.
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Now that boomers are online, how do they use the Net on behalf of their own health?
A review of a paperback book that can help seniors get started using a range of technologies.
A plethora of programs (not yet funded) to protect seniors.
No mention of any tech, including tech for remote monitoring.
Linked Senior, the first audio entertainment system for the elderly.
BBC study of 11,430 people concludes brain training games do not produce skills more transferrable to improving cognitive fitness than web-browing.
More but still not big: online prescribing represents 12% of prescriptions.
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As the Japanese population ages (25% over age 65), older workers are in the workforce.
"If a technology ever emerges to cure the inconvenience of getting old, it’ll catch on in Japan, where a gadget-crazy population is aging rapidly."
Aging Well center in Clearwater -- is this the new descriptor and model for Senior Centers?
Boomer entrepreneurs dominate the startup world -- as they did in every other domain.
Health IT-related savings generated over a 10 year period.
Well, speaking of seniors going online -- looks like there's a tech GOAL now.
One indicator of how seniors do learning to use computers is how they regard the future. If they’re positive, they’re more apt to make the transition.
A study evaluates responses by age groupings to social concerns.
KRU blog: WebMD (the most 'trusted' online health brand) launches Health Exchange, described as a 'game changer'.
An assessment of back-lighting and ease of reading of Kindle, iPad, etc.
Valet -- there may be a router for home wireless networks that doesn't require a geek to install.
All about a California study on the use of games -- this article can be outsmarted.
Yet another term -- FCC coins, Continua endorses.