Tag Archive for: Home Health industry

GrandCare interviews on Empowered Patient Radio

 

daily_tasks gcsKaren Jagoda of Empowered Patient Radio interviewed GrandCare’s Laura Mitchell on the technology expectations of caregivers and patients. Karen inquired about the importance of socialization, asked what the challenges in implementation and why doesn’t everyone have one of these systems? Listen to a detailed explanation of how in-home providers are strategically differentiating their organizations, while ensuring a return on investment.

Laura Mitchell, Chief Marketing Officer, GrandCare.com speaks on the appeal of technology for care receivers as well as home care providers and medical professionals. – See more at: http://radioactivebroadcasting.net/directory-page/itemlist/category/184-the-empowered-patient#sthash.In7nd1MG.dpuf

Radioactive Broadcasting specializes in creative content, media partnerships, marketing and brand expansion.  They help strategic partners grow their reach and increase their sales through internet radio and television shows, integrated content and social media. – See more at: http://radioactivebroadcasting.net/about-us#sthash.NAxbQxoN.dpuf

 

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Laura Mitchell, VP Business Development, GrandCare Systems

Laura Mitchell, Chief Marketing Officer, GrandCare Systems

Laura is a founding member of GrandCare Systems and was responsible for bringing GrandCares’s product to market in 2006, while aiding in the creation of the “Digital Health” and Aging & Technology industry. She specializes in channel partnerships, growth hacking, and non-traditional marketing and social media. She was featured in Forbes for her social media strategies and has been recognized by several industry media outlets, including Connected World Magazine’s 2014 Top Women of M2M, a nomination for the 2012 WEGO Health “Trailblazer”, 2012 Dealerscope’s 40 Under 40, 2012 “Young Turk of CE” by Custom Retailer Magazine, and the 2011 Mary Furlong Flame Award.

 

What is GrandCare?

System Comp HR11-13

Industry pioneer GrandCare Systems provides the most trusted and comprehensive caregiving technology on the market. Since 2005, GrandCare has enabled individuals to remain healthier, happier, and more independent.

GrandCare is a complete communication, cognition, and monitoring technology that is designed to keep individuals safe, healthy, happy, and independent at home. Using a series of wireless sensors that monitor activity (door, temperature, motion, bed, etc.) and telewellness (blood pressure, weight), a care partner can automatically be notified if anything is amiss. Family can connect via two way video chat AND send pictures, messages, emails, videos, and other communications to an easy-to-use touch monitor in the loved one’s home. Loved ones need ZERO technical experience.

 

For more information please visit our website at www.grandcare.com

The New Wave of Home Healthcare


Electronic House Reports:

Electronic systems allow seniors to age comfortably and safely in their own homes.

Jul. 30, 2010 — by Lisa Montgomery

Talk to just about anybody, and they’ll have a story to share about an aging loved one. Often, those stories are punctuated with feelings of worry, guilt and uncertainty over how to best care for their elderly parent or friend.

Recently, a number of up-and-coming electronics manufacturers have developed a variety of technologies aimed squarely at this growing market of concerned caregivers. The solutions, they hope, will afford seniors the means to lead an independent life at home while giving their family members the assurance that all is well.

According to healthcare statistics, the timing couldn’t be better. In a June 2009 report from the AARP Policy Institute, the population of people 65 or older is projected to grow by 89 percent between 2007 and 2030, more than four times faster than the population overall. The aging population will skyrocket by another 118 percent between the years 2030 and 2050.

“The silver tsunami is coming,” says Laura Mitchell, director of business relations at Grand Care Systems, a manufacturer of monitoring systems for seniors. “As the generation of baby boomers grows older, we simply won’t have the resources—facilities or manpower—to adequately take care of our aging population, unless we invest in the development of digital home healthcare technology.”

Factor in the astronomical costs of long-term care, and it’s easy to see why some healthcare analysts believe the digital home healthcare industry will grow from a $2 billion business to a $20 billion industry by 2020. (Click here to view a slideshow of digital home healthcare products.)

Innovative Start-ups
Like any emerging industry, the digital home healthcare market today consists mainly of small start-up companies, although big names like GE, Intel and Philips are major players as well (see sidebar). Little synergy exists between the manufacturers, resulting in an industry that’s “somewhat chaotic right now,” says Laurie Orlov of market research firm Aging in Place Technology Watch.

“Products that should probably be sold together as a package are being sold separately, and pricing is all over the board.” Still, the technologies available are innovative, affordable and—most importantly—cater to the needs of both stay-at-home seniors and the people who care for them.

To gain a clearer sense of some of the solutions gaining steam, Orlov divides digital home healthcare products and systems into four main categories: safety and security, communication and engagement, health and wellness, and learning and contribution. Although technologies that help seniors stay mentally sharp are important, the systems and products that fall under the first three categories are expected to have the biggest impact on the aging-at-home lifestyle.

Safety and Security
The home safety and security market is driven largely by companies with systems designed to monitor the activities of an individual and report those findings to a preselected group of people. Personal emergency response system (PERS) devices, which typically alert caregivers of a critical situation after it has occurred, are one example of this type of product. However, today’s breed of alert systems focus on more on preventing and mitigating problems than sending out an S.O.S. Referred to as ADL (activities of daily living) monitoring systems, they employ a combination of small, unobtrusive wireless environmental sensors, a networking base unit, specially configured software, and the Internet to communicate to caregivers the daily routines of their elderly stay-at-home parents. The sensors and networking unit capture information about the person’s movement throughout the day and distribute it to a secure web server, where the software analyzes and organizes the data. Invited caregivers can then log on to review the recorded information. They can also receive instant alerts via email or text when specified sensors are tripped or if no activity has been recorded within a certain period of time…

Read more: http://www.electronichouse.com/article/the_new_wave_of_home_healthcare/C155

90% of seniors want to stay home…is this a surprise??

90 percent of baby boomers say they want to age at home, not with relatives, in a nursing home, or at an assisted care facility.

By Laura Mitchell
REPOSTED FROM CEPRO http://www.cepro.com/article/whats_the_market_potential_for_home_health
April 16, 2008
According to AARP, when baby boomers are asked where they want to live as they age, 90 percent say, “In my home.”

They do not want to live with relatives, in a nursing home, or at an assisted care facility.

With this popular desire to remain at home comes great financial savings because every month a person stays in their own home as opposed to a an assisted living facility, that person can save $3,000 to $5,000 per month.

This leaves money available to invest in enabling technologies to keep seniors at home, safe and independent.

“Two-thirds of all men and women who have lived beyond the age of 65 in the entire history of the world are alive today,” according to Elizabeth Vierck’s “Fact Book on Aging.”

This includes 45,000 Americans over 100. In the year 2000, there were 35 million seniors, a figure that is expected to double by 2030.

By 2050 there will be more than one million people over 100 years of age. Americans over 85 are the fastest-growing segment of the population, according to the National Institute on Aging.

Families are assuming old-fashioned personal responsibility for aging family members, and they’re going back to the future to do it.

Facilities provide living arrangements to mimic family living, but more and more, seniors are actually “aging in place.”

Senior citizens fear moving into a nursing home and losing their independence more than death, according to a Clarity 2007 “Aging in Place” study.

The study also found that among baby boomers, 82 percent fear their parents will be mistreated in a nursing home, and 89 percent worry their parents will be sad.

Two-thirds of baby boomers said that financial problems were not likely to prevent their parents from remaining in their home, and 70 percent are concerned that their parent might be scared to leave their home.

While 49 percent of baby boomers are at least somewhat interested in using new technologies to help monitor their parents’ safety, 65 percent say they would like to use new technology, and 54 percent would consider sensors to monitor health and safety.

The 5 Home Healthcare Technology Categories

90 percent of baby boomers say they want to age at home, not with relatives, in a nursing home, or at an assisted care facility.

By Laura Mitchell
REPOSTED FROM CEPRO http://www.cepro.com/article/whats_the_market_potential_for_home_health
April 16, 2008
According to AARP, when baby boomers are asked where they want to live as they age, 90 percent say, “In my home.”

They do not want to live with relatives, in a nursing home, or at an assisted care facility.

With this popular desire to remain at home comes great financial savings because every month a person stays in their own home as opposed to a an assisted living facility, that person can save $3,000 to $5,000 per month.

This leaves money available to invest in enabling technologies to keep seniors at home, safe and independent.

“Two-thirds of all men and women who have lived beyond the age of 65 in the entire history of the world are alive today,” according to Elizabeth Vierck’s “Fact Book on Aging.”

This includes 45,000 Americans over 100. In the year 2000, there were 35 million seniors, a figure that is expected to double by 2030.

By 2050 there will be more than one million people over 100 years of age. Americans over 85 are the fastest-growing segment of the population, according to the National Institute on Aging.

Families are assuming old-fashioned personal responsibility for aging family members, and they’re going back to the future to do it.

Facilities provide living arrangements to mimic family living, but more and more, seniors are actually “aging in place.”

Senior citizens fear moving into a nursing home and losing their independence more than death, according to a Clarity 2007 “Aging in Place” study.

The study also found that among baby boomers, 82 percent fear their parents will be mistreated in a nursing home, and 89 percent worry their parents will be sad.

Two-thirds of baby boomers said that financial problems were not likely to prevent their parents from remaining in their home, and 70 percent are concerned that their parent might be scared to leave their home.

While 49 percent of baby boomers are at least somewhat interested in using new technologies to help monitor their parents’ safety, 65 percent say they would like to use new technology, and 54 percent would consider sensors to monitor health and safety.