Tag Archive for: Charlie Hillman

Mark Your Calendars – – Home Health Tech EVENTS at CEDIA 2011

If you are interested in the home health technology market, then CEDIA is the place to be Sept 7-10th in Indianapolis.

Come for the exhibits, the educational courses & the networking. GrandCare is a sponsor again this year of the Future Home Pavilion and will be showcased throughout the CEDIA show  by Distribution partners, Home Controls, JNL Technologies and Worthington Distribution.

GrandCare will be leading three educational courses on Digital Home Health & the valuable dealer opportunities available in this emerging market. GrandCare is also coordinating a pre-CEDIA HIPAA boot camp session as well as a no-host networking session!   Mark your calendars now – – if you will be at CEDIA, you can’t miss THESE events!!!!!!

Wednesday September 7th:

2:00p – 3:00pm  ESCR039 Home Health Technology is Here to Stay…Are You?
Catalog #: ESCR039-10, Wednesday: 2:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m.
Indianapolis Convention Center
Room 241
CEU Value: 0.50
Moderator: Laura Mitchell
Panelists: Tom Morgan, Peter Radsliff, Jim Gleason
In an economy where markets are drying up left and right, there’s one market that we can guarantee will only grow: The Aging & Technology Industry. This year alone, 7,000 boomers will turn age 65, increasing the demand for a new and sustainable “aging in place” model of care. Delivered by a true integration expert, the solution combines standard home automation and smart home technologies—complete with wireless tele-medicine, brain fitness, and socialization features. Learn about the future of aging and technology, why you should get involved, and how to start.  A la carte fees: Early $49/$99, Regular $71/$121, Onsite $85/$145  Register:  http://www.cedia.net/expo/expo11.att.register.php
4:00p – 5:30pm Pre-CEDIA HIPAA 90 minute boot camp (hosted by GrandCare Systems)
 Wednesday: 4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. 
Crowne Plaza at Union Station, 123 W Louisiana St, Indianapolis (Room TBA)
Get trained by GrandCare’s HIPAA compliance officer on what HIPAA is, what is means to DEALERS, why it is REQUIRED of dealers reselling telehealth devices,  and what t takes to be HIPAA compliant. This seminar is Wednesday, Sept 7th 4-530p at the Crowne Plaza-Union Station hotel in Indianpolis.  
$129 per person (discounts for GC Dealers). To reserve a spot, contact info@grandcare.com OR call 262-338-6147
 
6:00p – 8:00pm Pre-CEDIA DEALER-TO-DEALER MIXER!!! 
Pullman’s Lounge, Crowne Plaza at Union Station, 123 W Louisiana St, Indianapolis
ALL ARE WELCOME!!!  FREE
Come meet the GrandCare Team and fellow AgeTek Members An informal NO HOST meet & greet at Pullman’s Lounge, Crowne Plaza-Union Station Hotel in Indianapolis, directly following HIPAA Boot Camp. 6p – 8p.  No RSVP needed, just meet us there! The GrandCare Team as well as AgeTek Board members will be there!

Thursday September 8th:

 9:00a – 6:00 pm Exhibits Open – – Visit the Future Home Pavilion Booth 4754 
 See an Exhibit Hall Map Here: http://www.mapyourshow.com/shows/index.cfm?booth=4754&exhid=319054&show_id=cedia11&userid=&lang=EN&locale=EN
 Press may Schedule an appointment for a demonstration: info@grandcare.com or download our GrandCare Press Kit: https://www.grandcare.com/presskit/
 
 
11:00a – 12:00pm  ESCR047 Home Health Technology Case Study: A How-To Discussion
Catalog #: ESCR047-7, Thursday: 11:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
CEU Value: 0.50
Indianapolis Convention Center
Room 231
CEU Value: 0.50
Instructor: Laura Mitchell, GrandCare Systems
We all know the statistics and can agree that technology and aging is the future, so now what? This
course takes you on a journey from choosing your home health technologies to promoting and
educating to sales and support. Prepare to see real-life case studies on how actual home automation
installers started their business, promoted, sold and supported this new caregiving network clientele.
Discuss why it’s not your ordinary sale and how you can be prepared for this brand new $20 billion
dollar market! If you think home health technology might be your next market, you cannot afford to
miss this rare opportunity!
A la carte fees: Early $49/$99, Regular $71/$121, Onsite $85/$145  Register:  http://www.cedia.net/expo/expo11.att.register.php
  
 
 Friday September 9th:
9:00a – 6:00 pm Exhibits Open – – Visit the Future Home Pavilion Booth 4754 
 See an Exhibit Hall Map Here: http://www.mapyourshow.com/shows/index.cfm?booth=4754&exhid=319054&show_id=cedia11&userid=&lang=EN&locale=EN
 Press may Schedule an appointment for a demonstration: info@grandcare.com or download our GrandCare Press Kit: https://www.grandcare.com/presskit/
 
3:00p – 4:00pm  ESD010-4 Digital Home Health – The Technology of Aging in Place
ESD010
Catalog #: ESD010-4, Friday: 3:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
CEU Value: 0.50 
Moderator: Laura Mitchell, GrandCare Systems
Panelists: Ken Kerr, Kip Meachum, Charlie Hillman
Get into the nitty gritty of the various technologies being used and integrated into independent living for
our aging population. Industry expert Laura Mitchell assembles a panel of manufacturers and ESCs to
discuss aging technologies, ranging from the Personal Emergency Response Systems (Think: “Help, I’ve
fallen and I can’t get up!”) to medication management, fall detection, Activities of Daily Living and
socialization/cognition. Anyone who wants to enter the home health technology needs to attend.
A la carte fees: Early $49/$99, Regular $71/$121, Onsite $85/$145  Register:  http://www.cedia.net/expo/expo11.att.register.php
 

Saturday September 10th:

9:00a – 5:00 pm Exhibits Open – – Visit the Future Home Pavilion Booth 4754 
 See an Exhibit Hall Map Here: http://www.mapyourshow.com/shows/index.cfm?booth=4754&exhid=319054&show_id=cedia11&userid=&lang=EN&locale=EN
 Press may Schedule an appointment for a demonstration: info@grandcare.com or download our GrandCare Press Kit: https://www.grandcare.com/presskit/
 
 
 

What is CEDIA EXPO?

CEDIA EXPO is the leading tradeshow in the residential electronic systems industry. Attending CEDIA EXPO gives you an advantage over the competition by providing the latest technologies, FREE training on the latest products, and the industry’s best education with CEDIA University courses. CEDIA EXPO gives you the best strategies to profit in home entertainment, environmental control, energy management, green technology, home health, security, and more.

Register Now: http://www.cedia.net/expo/expo11.att.register.php

What is GrandCare Systems?

GrandCare combines ADL monitoring, tele-wellness assessment, senior social networking & cognitive assists into one easy-to-use system. GrandCare is highly customizable and can be set up to fit your needs exactly. There is no “one size fits all” model, so it’s easy to make sure each customer gets EXACTLY what he/she is looking for.

GrandCare exhibiting at LeadingAge Conference – BOOTH 2340

GrandCare will be joining Unified Alerts in a booth at the Leading Age Conference this October. GrandCare is no stranger to LeadingAge or CAST. GrandCare founder, Charlie Hillman, is a CAST commissioner and back in 2005, GrandCare was chosen as one of only 30 companies worldwide to showcase at the once-a-decade White House Conference on Aging in the “IMAGINE” Pavilion by CAST.  Come and meet GrandCare Founder, Charlie Hillman, see the GrandCare HomeBase in action and learn how GrandCare’s fully featured technology can help your organization to save costs, transform your caregiving staff into SUPER caregiving staff, save footsteps, connect staff & family in a cost-effective way, provide detailed wellness & assessment information for nursing staff, etc.   Leading Age, formerly AAHSA, is an association of 5,400 not-for-profit organizations celebrating its 50th anniversary and dedicated to expanding the world of possibilities for aging.

 

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tZtGOshrBPU&feature=player_embedded]

Thought of the Day from GrandCare’s Founder: Charlie Hillman

Technology that is properly applied will not only enable, but also strengthen the social bonds between the loved one, their caregiving network and future generations.  A successful technology will consider all of the aspects of aging to positively affect physical, emotional, mental and spiritual wellness.  If our society does not embrace available technologies to encourage responsible aging, the healthcare costs and the emotional toll taken on familial caregivers will be staggering. Charlie Hillman Founder, GrandCare Systems

GrandCare’s VP of Marketing, Laura Mitchell, selected as Venture Boomer Summit Business Plan JUDGE

http://www.scuboomerventure.com/competitions/judges.html

Business Plan Competition!!!!!

PRIZES

Best Business Plan
$10,000

Best App
$1,000

Finalists will present their business plans to a panel of industry experts at the Summit on June 15, 2011 and the winners will be announced at the end of the day.

JUDGES

Leaders in the field of aging, venture capitalists, entrepreneurs and industry analysts will provide valuable feedback on the entrepreneurs’ boomer business plans and apps. Check back soon for the list of judges participating in the 2011 event.

Finalist Judges

Andy Cohen – CEO and Co-founder, Caring.com
Andy Donner – Director, Physic Ventures
Jody Holtzman – Senior Vice President, Thought Leadership, AARP
Kurt Hulander – Platform Leader, Health Solutions, Best Buy
Nancy Kamei – Sector Director, Intel Capital
Xander Mahony – Analyst, Draper Fisher Jurvetson
Jeff Shoemate – Vice President of Innovation and Business Development, United Healthcare

First and Second Round Judges

Susan Ayers Walker – Managing Director, SmartSilvers Alliance
Laura Mitchell – Vice President, Marketing, GrandCare Systems
Michael Sarfatti – Managing Director, SmartSilvers Alliance

Extraordinary Grands

Charlie & Gaytha Hillman: Grand Entrepreneurs

A solution for Great Aunt Clara became a thriving business

Charlie and Gaytha Hillman with their seven grandchildren

By Richard J. Anthony, Sr.

Charlie and Gaytha Hillman’s latest success story began with a nearly tragic furnace fire in the home of Charlie’s great aunt Clara back in 1993. Although she had sensed something was wrong, 89-year-old Clara, typical of older adults who live alone and protect their independence, “didn’t want to bother anyone.”

After rescuing his aunt and being shaken by her close call, Charlie put his MIT training and engineering inquisitiveness to work to come up with a solution. He outfitted Clara’s home with the nascent GrandCare product consisting of basic sensors and even a device to automatically turn on The Lawrence Welk Show, her favorite TV program. Although the technology was primitive by today’s standards. Clara was now safe, happy and  continue living independently at home for the rest of her life.

And Charlie began to imagine the possibilities.

Having sucessfully started technology businesses since the 1980s, the Hillmans returned after some years to the idea of innovating that early version of their monitoring system. Their innovations were so good and so timely that they were invited to the 2005 White House Conference on Aging. In llate 2006 Charlie and Gaytha offically launched GrandCare Systems™ LLC for use in private homes and community care settings. Their mission? To provide high-end technology products and services to improve the lives of the aging and those who care for them.

Read more

RECORDED TOUR of the GrandCare System!!!!

Did you miss today’s GrandCare Tour???  Below is some information that we went over during the TOUR!!!

Good news!  We have recorded it for your viewing!!!!!!! View and/or download HERE!

5-11-11 GrandCare TOUR Bus STOPS:

1. Meet the founder Charlie Hillman

2. West Bend, WI — Exploring the history of GrandCare

3. GrandCare Corp Showroom – Saw the various models and sensor types

4. Met Henry – a 72 year old male.

-Lives alone at Home

-Has the Interactive GrandCare System

– SKYPES with his grandkids

– Plays Solitaire on GrandCare

– Watches YouTube Videos, Checks Weather Reports, Looks at Photo Albums

– Manages his own wellness by taking his weight, blood pressure and glucose readings. System automatically tracks them.

– Does not have a personal computer and does not want one

5. Met Jane (Henry’s 50 year old daughter)

– Lives 8 miles from Henry

– Manages his vitals and looks at his glucose readings

– Receives Alerts at work

– Uploads all of her pics to Facebook (Automatically go to her dad’s system as well)

– SKYPES with her dad

6. Tour of the Virtual ONLINE Caregiver Interface

– Adding Communications to the GrandCare Screen or TouchScreen

– Looking at Graphs

– Setting up Rules/Parameters

7. Question/Answers

What is GrandCare and How do I use it?

GrandCare Systems Special Event!

Tomorrow, Wed May 11th

3p ET/ 2p CT / 1p MT / 12p PT

 Join us http://grandcaresystems.webex.com

  • Learn about how GrandCare started in 2005

  • Informative overview of the System Components

  • See a LIVE Demo of the Online User Interface

  • Participatate in an interactive Question/Answer Session

See our full E-invitation HERE

Geek News Central Interviews GrandCare Founder, Charlie Hillman

Geek News Central
Grandcare: Keeping the Senior Citizen Independent
POSTED BY KL TECH MUSE AT 10:04 PM ON FEBRUARY 13, 2011

Andy McCasky and Esbjorn Larsen spoke to Charles Hillman, PE of Grandcare. Grandcare goal is to help seniors stay in their home, while allowing the caregiver to have peace of mind. The system consists of a central unit similar to a TiVo box that connects to any size TV or monitor. Then a series of motion sensors can placed around the house that measure motions.

There is also a wellness system that can measure blood pressure, weight and other health measurements. The monitor has a series of buttons, that can be set by and changed by the caregiver. The buttons can be big as needed and give a tactile feed back to the senior citizen. On the buttons are pictures to indicate who or what the senior will connect to. Push a button and the senior citizen is connected with a family member through Skype or a video plays that the caregiver has chosen for the senior citizen, the possibilities are endless.

The Grandcare system is set up to prevent malware and virus, and unwanted communication to the senior citizen. It is simple to use and no computer knowledge is necessary by the senior citizen. Grandcare has distributors and dealers that install the system.

Interview by Andy McCaskey of SDR News. and Esbjorn Larsen of MrNetCast.com.

Watch the video Here

NOTE – – The Current Activity & Wellness Sensors Available from GrandCare Systems are here
Tele-Wellness Sensors Currently Available for Retail: Blood Pressure, Weight Scale, Medication Dispenser. (Glucometer & Pulse Oximeter available pending FDA Approval)

Thanks,

The ‘Aging-in-Place’ Opportunity featuring aging technologies like GrandCare Systems

The ‘Aging-in-Place’ Opportunity
By Dan Daley, February 1, 2011

Aging Technologies
Presto’s products convert electronic communications from family into printed multimedia letters for seniors.
Why Digital Home Health Care Technology May Be Good for Your Business
We’re getting older, and that’s good. That was the message from the dais at the Digital Home Health Panel that took place during CEDIA EXPO in Atlanta this past September. More specifically, referencing data that shows 70 million Americans reaching senior status by 2030, Ken Kerr, president and CEO at Home Controls, which distributes Grandcare, Presto, and ClearSound elderly care and connectivity devices, put it bluntly: “New needs in huge numbers in an aging population equals new opportunities.”

That was the point that a half dozen or so technology companies that are targeting the home health care industry wanted to get across. All market sectors start off small, and if home health care does develop into a major source of revenue for residential systems integrators, the approximately 50 systems specialists who comprised the panel’s audience might be looked back on as the beginnings of the small army that the product manufacturers and distributors believe will grow into in the coming two decades.

In contrast to the acrimonious health care insurance debate that took place a year earlier, proponents of home health care technology got down to the economic brass tacks early on. Kerr compared the cost of assisted living or nursing home stays–he cited the approximately $75,000 it costs to maintain one person annually in a nursing home environment–with the cost of outfitting a home with sensors that monitor, record, and transmit information about location, medications, and other key daily necessities and said it would be a fraction of the ongoing costs of living outside the home.

“That’s the value proposition to the customer,” Kerr explained. But the numbers are equally good for the integrators that will sell and install those technology products. “Digital home health products are not yet commoditized, so the margins are very, very good right now, like the home theater business when it started out,” Kerr pointed out.

What Integrators Will Need To Know
Aging-in-place as a systems proposition is most analogous to security integration; in addition to the sale and installation of technology products, there is also a recurring revenue stream derived from monitoring data recorded and transmitted by system sensors. These system/monitoring combinations, from companies like Grandcare and Halo Monitoring’s MyHalo fall-detection system, will be worth $20 billion in North America by 2020, according to Laurie Orlov, founder of the Aging in Place Technology watch blog. Grandcare’s system is an example of the active system/monitoring approach that will take the place of, “I’ve fallen and I can’t get up!” passive alert transmitters.

Motion sensors–wireless X10 and Z-wave modules work on the Grandcare system–placed around an elderly parent’s home will send to the caregiver’s laptop or PC information about the occupant’s movements, or lack thereof. That information is important, said Charles Hillman, CEO at Grandcare.
“If someone gets up to use that bathroom in the middle of the night, you expect them to be back in bed within a few minutes,” Hillman said. “If they’re not back in certain amount of time, an alert is sent to the person who monitors them.” The same type of information is also recorded and sent by active pillboxes that show the occupant what to take and when to take it, as well as indicate to the caregiver that the medication has been dispensed.
Programming is typically of the “if this, then that…” type: door sensors can be programmed so that if a particular door is opened between 2 a.m. and 6 a.m., an e-mail or text notification is sent to the caregiver. Blood pressure and weight information are also sent via Bluetooth to Grandcare’s main processor, which includes a display large enough to be read by aging eyes, and then on to the caregiver. However, they will have to learn what to watch for and which bits of information are significant. For instance, Hillman points out that a gain of eight pounds in three days could be an indication of impending congestive heart failure. Thus, user education will play an important role in the successful application of these systems.

The cost of these systems is within reach of many if not most families; a typical Grandcare system will cost between $3,000 and $8,000, plus a $49 charge per month for monitoring services. However, that cost may still be out of the reach of a substantial number of seniors and their families. That’s where Medicaid and Medicare, the federal health systems, come into play, or not… Home healthcare technology is still so novel that it hasn’t been approved by federal administrators. “[Medicare approval] is going to be a state-by-state situation,” Hillman told the CEDIA audience, noting that the federal programs are administered by the states.
Another pitfall that systems integrators will have to reckon with will be liability issues, including system performance and access to a customer’s medical records, which could potentially run afoul of the Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act (HIPAA) regulation (see sidebar).

Health insurance coverage of aging-in-place technology may fall in line with whatever federal overseers decide on the subject, so that outcome will take some time to manifest itself. However, longterm care insurance may become a factor sooner. “Long-term care insurance companies have been collecting premiums for years now, and it’s going to come time soon for them to start paying out,” Hillman said. “Covering aging-in-place technology will result in lower overall payouts in the long run.”

And that was an underlying theme throughout the presentations: the fact that, as America’s population ages, the existing healthcare proposition will no longer be able to viably support it.

GC HomeBase
Motion sensors–wireless X10 and Z-wave modules work on the Grandcare system–placed around an elderly parent’s home will send to the caregiver’s laptop or PC information about the occupant’s movements, or lack thereof.

The Psychology of the Sale
While much of home health care’s technologies are based on systems similar to those currently used in home automation, there are significant differences in the culture of that technology. For instance, where home technologies are viewed as a mostly male domain but subject to the industry’s quaint but nonetheless very real “wife acceptance factor,” decisions made about agingin- place technologies will be heavily weighted toward female family members, because women tend to take on the caregiver role. The target demographic for these types of systems will be 45 to 65 years old, says Peter Radsliff, president and CEO of Presto, whose product converts electronic communications from family into printed multimedia letters for seniors.

“The family caregiver is usually the oldest daughter, and she’s the quarterback when it comes to choosing healthcare systems,” he said. “But it’s always going to be a multigenerational sale.”
The psychology of the systems sale is similarly affected; the buyer isn’t generally the person being monitored but the person or persons doing the monitoring. Technology can be used not only to assure a senior’s safety but also to assuage the guilt that family members who now live in other parts of the country can feel about not being nearby anymore.

“The family may feel guilty about lessening the connection between themselves and the senior members of the family,” Kerr said. “Technology can help bridge that gap.”
That brings up an interesting element of aging-in-place as an integration sector. Several products integrate social networking features. Grandcare’s GC Trillium processor lets family members and seniors send and receive pictures, voicemails, letters, videos, and music, as well as brain fitness games in what Grandcare’s director of business relations Laura Mitchell says is a “nonintimidating technology solution.”

Jack York, president of It’s Never 2 Late, a Colorado-based company that creates customized computer systems with therapeutic and entertainment content for use in nursing homes, assisted-living communities and adult-day programs, says companies that have tried to develop the aging-in-place market and failed had focused too much on the technology.
“We’ve seen many of them come and go because they think it’s the technology that will sell the idea,” the former Silicon Valley entrepreneur said as part of a presentation titled, “Connecting The Greatest Generation.” “The reality is, you need to connect on the personal level. You need engagement software that can connect people as well as offer person-centered therapy to help stabilize cognitive decline.”

Hillman agreed, stating, “Socialization is the Trojan Horse; it gets the senior past the technology aversion. It’s the connectivity that will sell to the senior.”

All of the companies that made up the home health care pavilion at the CEDIA Show are small, independent firms. Some are also obvious candidates to become the entry point into home health care technology for larger companies by way of mergers and acquisitions. Larger entities, however, are also beginning to target this emerging sector. In August, technology giants Intel and GE announced a 50/50 joint venture to develop and market products, services, and technologies that promote healthy, independent living at home and in assisted living communities, though these are commercial propositions aimed at connecting seniors at home with institutional caregivers. There’s also interest stirring in technological academic circles: at CEDIA, Georgia Tech showed a prototype of a bathroom mirror that can monitor and analyze skin tone using IR scanning, which can alert users to potential skin cancers and other diseases.

Ken Kerr
Ken Kerr, president and CEO at Home Controls, which distributes Grandcare, Presto, and ClearSound elderly care and connectivity devices, puts it bluntly: “New needs in huge numbers in an aging population equals new opportunities.”

The residential systems industry is beginning to take notice. In September, the CEA added an awards category for Home Health Products to its Mark of Excellence Awards. The upper tier of residential systems manufacturers is aware of the potential for an aging-in-place market, and there’s been some proactivity in that regard, such as ELAN’s contribution of automation components for the Eskaton National Demonstration Home in Sacramento, California. But they likely will not be market makers.

“The bigger you are, the longer you wait for new markets to emerge,” Joe Lautner, manager of business development and product management at ELAN, said candidly. But Lautner says the agingin- place market is one that is high on his agenda to monitor, which he’s doing by talking with insurance companies and the CEA. “We’re trying to test the market, to get stuff in front of seniors and see what we can learn from it and what dealers can make money on,” he said. “We have to build a business case first.”

Thus, the group of independent companies that gathered at CEDIA is the point of the residential home-care technology spear, collectively focused on using technology to keep seniors safely in their homes longer and connected to family. They have a reason to be bullish on that opportunity. As Peter Radsliff of Presto put it, “This is market that’s not going to start contracting anytime soon.”

What You Need to Know About Privacy Rules
When integrating an aging in place system, ES Cs will have to consider liability issues, including system performance and access to a customer’s medical records, which could potentially run afoul of the Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act (HIPAA ) regulation. This rule sets national standards for the security of electronic protected health information, and the confidentiality provisions of the Patient Safety Rule protect identifiable information being used to analyze patient safety events and improve patient safety. Grandcare CEO Charles Hillman suggests that integrators anticipate these issues and have waivers for clients to sign ready as part of project documentation. “I’d also suggest involving the family as much as possible in this,” he added, noting that they can open doors to government and healthcare agencies, thus cutting through some of the bureaucracy.

A Few Questions To Ask Yourself
Peter Radsliff

Peter Radsliff, CEO of senior connectivity device maker Presto and nominal head of the home healthcare technology trade group AGETEK, says these are the issues that integrators need to address as they consider the agingin- place market.
■ Do you need new skills, and if so, how to acquire them? Will it be via new training or by adding new personnel?
■ Will you need a new brand or division to enter the market? “You may want to differentiate your home theater or automation business from this,” he said. “A separate brand may make you more credible in the senior market.” It may also help you leverage an existing client base.
■ Who will do the selling? “In many cases it might be better to bring in someone who has healthcare sales experience,” he suggested.
■ Will you sell into residential or commercial markets, or both? Unlike other systems sectors, home healthcare technology’s lines are blurred as more seniors move into assisted living homes and independent living facilities, where homes are part of larger communities.

CEDIA Sees Huge Opportunity in Home Health Care
Noting that many ES Cs are of an age when family members begin to require extra health attention and referencing a family member of his own in that situation, Dave Pedigo, senior director of technology for CEDIA , says that home health care and aging-in-place technology represents “a huge opportunity for systems integrators.”

Pedigo says the first-ever health care technology pavilion indicates CEDIA ’s belief in the potential for the sector, and he confirmed that the organization is working in tandem with home health care manufacturers’ trade group AGETE K to develop the market. However, he cautioned, significant legislative and regulatory issues remain to be addressed, such as insurance and Medicare coverage of technology products and installation, and complex liability issues for ES Cs. But, Pedigo concluded, “I think we’ll look back a few years from now at this year’s CEDIA show and realize this was the beginning of a potentially very big new market, one in which ES Cs can do well with by doing good.”

Dan Daley is a freelance writer in Nashville, Tennessee.

Gen X-ers Show the Way in Aging/Technology Services? Perhaps we are looking to the wrong generation to lead the way…

Just some thoughts I had the other day when I was reading Steve Gurney’s (from Retirement Living) “Swimming in a Sea of Gadgets” post on his impressions of the Silvers Summit at CES. One of the points he makes is that if we create easier computers for seniors to use (think GrandCare, MyGait, Telikin, etc), wouldn’t everyone want to use them?

This really struck a chord with me. Not only do I absolutely agree that this is key, but it also made me start to think that maybe we are, indeed, marketing to the wrong people. Arlene Harris from Jitterbug once spoke on our GrandCare weekly Aging & Technology Webinar and she made the point that nobody wants to feel “old”. When they designed the Jitterbug, they designed it for everybody – and it was, of course, a fantastic new tool for senior clients…but it didn’t make them feel old. When marketing, they targeted 20 years younger than the “Client”, because everybody sort of identifies with their “perception” of who they want to be and not necessarily who they are.

So, the idea with all of these new Non-Computer, but is a computer, solutions is that it is easier for anyone to have the complete computer experience (in a non traditional way). No mouse, no complicated URL bars, no garbled junk that you need to wade through…sounds familiar…oh yeah – sounds like my IPAD!! I think about how my iPhone and iPad have changed not only my life, but the lives of my 2 and 4 year old. It took them about 2 minutes to become absolutely fluent in the art of IPADDING 🙂

So let’s think about these products. They are not designed to be geriatric, but instead hip, cool and the “IT” thing to do. People are trying them out and saying, wow – my kids/parents could do this. Now, I am not sure that my 87 year old grandfather could navigate through my IPAD…probably not. But, I do know from first-hand experience that he has had ZERO trouble with the GrandCare Touch Interface…If we design it for anyone to use -it becomes less of a “this works well only if you’re old” mentality. Take my two kids…once again – I have a GrandCare TouchScreen mounted in our kitchen. It reminds us (loudly) to give the kids their Flinstone Gummy Vitamins at night. In fact, my husband grabbed the audio file from “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” and Nurse Ratched says “Medication Time” if the med cabinet has not been opened by 7pm. We enjoy little things like that and the boys think it’s hilarious. We also use it to put our schedules on there – so everyone is aware of the calendar events (replacing the big calendar we had on the wall when I was a kid where we had to (Gasp) WRITE on it). The GrandCare System updates us with the weather, shows pictures (the boys love the animal stock photos). I also add pictures from birthday parties (we don’t really have tangible photo albums around the house for the kids to look at) so the kids LOVE seeing their friends and cousins on the “TV” in our kitchen. We think of it as a huge digital photo frame (on steroids) when it’s not being actively used. It’s fun and a fantastic entertainment piece while the boys sit at the table waiting for dinner. Another thing I (as a parent) really enjoy is that I can remotely program which YouTube and Streaming Videos/Music can be accessible through the touchscreen for my kids to access. I don’t know if you’ve seen some of the stuff on YouTube, but even seemingly appropriate “I love Waffles” songs can quickly turn into dirty sexual waffle songs…hard to believe, I know…but I do try to be very careful with what the boys are watching. The remote control that I have is wonderful and I can constantly add new songs and videos for the kids to enjoy! I also put notes on there for our babysitters (where we are, directions for bedtime, directions for my 2 year old’s nebulizer, etc) and our contact information is always there (at all times), should someone need to contact us. Our GrandCare System also does some basic home automation stuff (turns on the hallway light if anyone gets out of bed during the night to use the bathroom, calls my cell phone if someone opened the front door during the night – I’m looking at my 2 year old on this one, turns off lights after periods of inactivity, etc.)

It’s so easy to see why all ages could benefit from a system like this. Perhaps WE GEN X-ers are the ones that need to be the early adopters and show the way!!!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fD0qdEZd1PM]
– Laura Mitchell
VP Marketing
GrandCare Systems