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
By 2007, number of 55+ living in adult-only communities still low -- grew from 2% to 3%.
Older adults told that older adults do poorly, indeed do more poorly on memory test than those not told.
The boomers offer advertisers “an audience that has assets, not allowances."
This also applys to care for and about seniors.
Consumers interested in PHR; seniors very interested in home monitoring.
Helping vision-impaired seniors access Internet
Technology changes everything -- not always correctly.
Online doctors visits -- company is called American Well.
Planning for a senior center boomers will visit.
Apparently odds are if grandmother is in her 70's, the answer is yes.
In tough times, seniors are not moving, looking for senior-friendly community attributes.
WSJ notes GE/Intel Partnership, mentions investment in QuietCare.
Cleveland Clinic and Microsoft HealthVault in pilot.
Life outside of a nursing home is feasible with help from technology.
Are NORCS (Naturally Occuring Retirement Communities) right for you?
Alzheimer's Disease is consuming more of the population and the healthcare system.
Geriatric care managers help baby boomers who are more 'technology-savvy' -- but with what technology?
The AgeSuit -- So glad to see students are learning how it feels to walk around in an old person's shoes. Sort of.
YARP (Yet another research project) for ambient technology in the home.
A French home uses universal design -- in spite of French resistance.
37% of aged 64+ today are using computers (Pew Internet Research).