818,000 of the of the 65+ population live in assisted living.
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Fears that the senior housing sector could be overbuilt might be all too true, newly released data suggests.
NAC: Caregivers over 75 constitute 7 percent of those who provide unpaid care to a relative or friend.
Wray: “The way we make life better is to try to provide technologies that keep them safe and independent at home.”
A not-so-complimentary NY Times hands-on review of the AARP RealPad.
Using the new feature is as easy as saying "Alexa, read [book title]."
Creating a dementia caregiver ecosystem -- possibly underpinned with technology that includes the caregiver.
Aging 2.0's stake is 5-7% in startups with an early product and key team members in place.
Maine is the oldest state in the nation -- thus research on tech for seniors.
Development, validation, commercialization, dissemination, adoption of products & services.
When driving stops, total isolation kicks in.
Elderly family members receive messages and alerts directly through their TVs, using a simplified remote.
The 85+ population in NYC has grown five times as fast as the general population, rising nearly 30 percent since 2000.
Retirees who use retirement money to pay housing costs face disaster.
CareTree, one the 80-plus startups that have been accepted to at Chicago's MATTER.
No HIPAA invoked and no one looked at any advanced directive documents.
The company still has nearly $19 million to divide up among promising new assistive technologies.
Alarm.com has $167.3 million in revenue -- and includes the former BeClose in its Wellness offering.
Perhaps pet and health markets should cross paths.
UK survey says people fear loss of independence worse than death.
GreatCall applauds Senate Hearing on Technology for Aging in Place.
Reunioncare helps family members organize care and communicate with one another.
Writer asserts that this voice-enabled device is more useful than first thought.
For Silicon Valley executive, sensors help him keep an eye on his aging parents.
Will the system be blamed for failure -- or is the problem with people and procedures?