Text Only
Search

 
Eldercare Specialists Ask Congress to Support New Technologies


11 February 2008
Logue report - Download (MP3) audio clip
Logue report - Listen (MP3) audio clip
Logue report - Download (MP3) audio clip
Logue report - Listen (MP3) audio clip

The "Baby Boomer" generation - born in the post-World War II population surge - is aging with oldest of the boomers now in their mid-60s. Many boomers are currently caring for their elderly parents and know what lies ahead for them. Having grown up with technology, they are looking for technological innovations to help them in their advancing years. Eldercare specialists recently brought some of those innovations to Capitol Hill in a quest for Congressional support. VOA's Susan Logue reports.

Kathy Bakkenist, Vice President of Ecumen, a non-profit that provides senior housing, told Congress technology can lower cost and improve quality of eldercare
Kathy Bakkenist, Vice President of Ecumen, a non-profit that provides senior housing, told Congress technology can lower cost and improve quality of eldercare
Kathy Bakkenist, senior vice president of Ecumen, one of the nation's largest non-profit providers of senior housing told Congress that technology can save money and improve lives when it comes to caring for the elderly. "If technology can keep an Alzheimer's patient out of an institution for an extra year or two - and we know it can - the savings will be tremendous and the preservation of a preferred lifestyle at home will provide a significant benefit to all," she said.

Bakkenist was one of five people who testified on Capitol Hill to promote a new organization designed to evaluate and develop technologies for the elderly and their caregivers.

She says Ecumen tests cutting-edge technologies in many of its residences. "We look for technologies to pilot (test) that we believe are user-friendly and affordable, and will ultimately result in an improved lifestyle with greater efficiencies."

Experts say touch screen charts are more efficient than traditional medical charts
Experts say touch screen charts, like this one by 6N Systems, Inc., are more efficient than traditional medical charts
For example, some Ecumen residences feature touch-screen computers for recording patient information, such as medication, blood pressure readings, and daily activities.

Some apartments are equipped with a monitoring system, known as QuietCare,  comprised of lipstick-sized sensors strategically placed around an individual's home to detect potential health problems. "The client decides where they want those placed," Bakkenist says. "[It] could be a refrigerator, could be a bathroom, could be the kitchen."

The sensors detect heat and motion. Once a baseline of normal behavior is established, any deviations are analyzed and sent remotely to designated computer screens. "And again," Bakkenist says, "the client decides who gets access to the readout of the information."

Honor Hacker, 82, a retired teacher who now lives in an Ecumen facility in Minnesota, has QuietCare in her apartment. "I like knowing that there is that added level of safety with QuietCare, but that it doesn't jeopardize my privacy," she told Congress, adding QuietCare helped detect her serious nighttime breathing difficulties known as sleep apnea.

Honor Hacker, 82, demonstrates the brain exerciser Dakim [m]Power on Capitol Hill
Honor Hacker, 82, demonstrates the brain exerciser Dakim [m]Power on Capitol Hill
Hacker says she enjoys being an early-adapter of new technology. She especially likes Dakim [m]Power, a computer-based cognitive training program - essentially, a brain exerciser for the elderly. "It's made me more alive," she says. "When I don't use it for a few days… it's so good to get back to it and see what you knew, what you didn't know, how you could advance."

Dakim [m]Power presents challenging but entertaining exercises using film clips, pictures, music and narration. Progress is tracked so caregivers can assess the user's cognitive abilities. Simpler exercises are geared toward those with dementia.

Dakim [m]Power is already being used in some assisted living facilities, where it reduces the need for one-on-one cognitive therapy. A home version of the program will be released soon. After all, one of the objectives of using new technologies in eldercare is to allow individuals to stay in their own homes as they age.

The GrandCare system combines home monitoring with internet connection to family members
The GrandCare system combines home monitoring with internet connection to family members
That's precisely the purpose of GrandCare, an Internet-based system developed by Charlie Hillman and his son-in law Nick Mitchell. "We place a system in the home of a senior living independently," says Gaytha Hillman, Charlie's wife and vice president of the family-owned company that manufactures GrandCare.

Gaytha explains that a computer screen in the senior's home "shows them messages from their loved ones, pictures, calendar appointments, headline news, nostalgia and triva - all of the socialization aspects."

Gaytha Hillman says GrandCare is a family owned business
Gaytha Hillman says GrandCare is a family owned business
In addition, much like QuietCare, GrandCare uses sensors placed throughout the home "that are unobtrusive, but caregivers can go on line and see the recorded activity from those sensors. [They can] make sure that the grandmother is moving around normally, that the temperature of the house is right; she's not leaving the house in the middle of the night."

Many of the programs and products demonstrated on Capitol Hill, including [m]Power and the Hillman's GrandCare system, were developed to meet a personal need, to assist an aging parent. Ecumen's Kathy Bakkenist says she hopes Congress will be inspired to lend legislative support to these entrepreneurs:

"We need to reduce barriers to getting these technologies to market," she says, "to get them into the hands of consumers and to figure out ways to fund them so they are affordable to a broad range of people."

Over the next 20 years, 76 million Americans will enter their senior years. Many may live to be 100 or older. Technologies like the ones showcased for lawmakers could help make those last years of life more enjoyable for them and their families.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Nintendo Wii Has More Uses Than Just as Game
 
  Top Story
US Army Charges Alleged Fort Hood Shooter with Premeditated Murder

  More Stories
Obama Orders Revisions to Afghan Options
Obama Begins First Presidential Trip to Asia  Audio Clip Available
Obama to Hold Jobs Summit in December   Audio Clip Available
Reports: US Ambassador to Kabul Expresses Caution About More Troops  Audio Clip Available
APEC Ministers say  Economic Recovery is Fragile  Audio Clip Available
Clinton Vows Support for Philippine Typhoon  Recovery, Anti-Terrorism Fight  Audio Clip Available
US Leaders May Interact With Burmese at Singapore Summit  Audio Clip Available
N. Korea Says South Will Pay 'Expensive Price' for Naval Clash
China Rejects Human Rights Watch Report on Black Jails
Thasksin Delivers Speech in Phnom Penh
Sri Lanka Military Chief Resigns  Audio Clip Available
As Alleged Fort Hood Shooter Recovers, New Questions Arise  Video clip available
Pakistan Seeks Role in US-Afghan Policy
Obama's Middle East Strategy Stalls
Zimbabwe Land Seizures Reportedly Intensify  Audio Clip Available
First Recorded Dengue Fever Epidemic Hits Cape Verde  Audio Clip Available
Paisley, Swift Winners at CMA Awards  Audio Clip Available