About 74% of middle-aged and senior Americans would have very little to no trust in health info generated by AI.
You are here
Related News Articles
A recent look at senior housing trends like villages and cohousing.
Eric Dishman demonstrates prototyps of technology to enable aging in place.
Mayo Clinic and the University of Miami School of Medicine how-to on implementing telehealth.
Genealogy tools like Ancestry.com (1.6 million users) to help families trace their history.
NY Times provides multiple tips and techniques for various gadgets.
This is a quite entertaining video of the introduction of iPads into a senior housing community.
A critical reflection on usability and design of telehealth technologies for the home.
Patrick Roden excellent blog post about seniors losing their homes in the 'aging in place' years.
Being taken care of by family members and moving to a retirement community replaced by keeping up with technology, working and staying physically fit.
Senior with dementia diagnosed but license renewed. Solution: disable the car.
Still teaching and telling jokes, the author of 'Up the Down Staircase' interviewed at age 100.
Tools and techniques for finding home care workers -- what works.
Skipping a generation, tech-enabled grandparents and grandchildren connect with each other.
Boston Globe 'Ideas': What will old age be like for today's 30-year-olds?
"Incredible growth predicted of the market will go from $9.8 billion in 2010 to $23 billion in 2015."
Digital game sales slowly replacing decline in retail store sales of its games.
Marc Freedman's new book about boomers who enter their reinvention period in their 50's.
Two new AARP reports released, Healthy@Home 2.0, Connected Living and Social Aging.
And they name a new Ombudsman to replace Brian Lee, fired shortly after Rick Scott became governor.
Why grandparents move to where the grandchildren are -- short of that, of course, why to get a computer and Skype.