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Innovative New Technology Helps Seniors Age in Place

Innovative New Technology Helps Seniors Age in Place

How Interactive Tech Can Help Older Adults Live Alone and Ease Caregiver Fatigue

When Alyssa Weakley lived 400 miles from her grandmother, the distance and lack of communication brought constant worry and stress. Then 82 and living alone, Janet Dibkey was showing early signs of memory loss.

Dibkey is among the of older adults who want to spend their later years in their current home rather than move to an assisted living facility. Weakley is one of the more than 53 million Americans serving as a caregiver to an aging adult or child with special needs. She is also a researcher at 嘿嘿视频 Health helping older Americans maintain a measure of independence through communication tools and sensor technology.

鈥淵ou never not worry,鈥 Weakley said. 鈥淎s a clinical neuropsychologist, I know how cognitive impairment can affect almost every facet of an older adult鈥檚 life. I knew there needed to be a solution to improve their life at home while easing the stress on their loved ones.鈥

A new task management tool

For older adults, mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer鈥檚 disease make it harder to complete important daily activities such as managing medications, paying bills on time and remembering to attend appointments. Weakley designed the Interactive Care Platform, or I-Care, to connect older adults experiencing cognitive impairment to their family members who live apart from them for support in completing these important daily activities.

Created in partnership with older adults with cognitive impairment, caregivers and experts in caregiving, dementia and technology development, I-Care has six main functions:

  • a homepage that lists current weather, upcoming events and recent caregiver messages
  • a calendar that can be modified by both the care recipient and caregiver
  • a to-do list
  • a messaging center where care partners can send messages and make video calls
  • a collaborative notes section where information regarding doctor appointments and vacation plans can be stored
  • a goals section where individuals can track brain health behaviors such as exercise and cognitive engagement

鈥淣ot only does I-Care assist with managing everyday activities, but it also addresses social isolation and loneliness in the care receiver and stress and worry in the caregiver,鈥 Weakley explained. 鈥淭he platform also captures backend data. We hope to use this data to alert individuals when subtle changes occur that may suggest cognitive or health decline.鈥

Researcher talks with older patient in her dining room
Clinical neuropsychologist Alyssa Weakley visits Leeanne Patton in her home in Citrus Heights. Patton uses the I-Care system to connect with her sister in Southern California. (Gregory Urquiaga/嘿嘿视频)

California鈥檚 aging population 

According to the , the state鈥檚 over-60 population is projected to diversify and grow faster than any other age group. That means that by 2030, one-quarter of the state's population will be over the age of 60.

鈥淲e are at an inflection point in our communities, with our population aging and becoming more diverse,鈥 said , co-champion of 嘿嘿视频鈥檚 initiative, which has gathered experts to develop technology solutions that enable people to live independently and stay connected to their families and health care teams.

鈥淔or the first time in history, we have more grandparents than grandchildren in society. This means families are strained to provide support for their older members, particularly from a distance. We need new creative solutions to support one another.鈥

As people age, they often share common desires: to remain in their own homes, to maintain their independence for as long as possible, and to rely on family and friends for support when necessary. This concept of staying in your own home as you age is known as "aging in place." However, many older adults and their families have concerns about safety, mobility and daily activities.

A woman with glasses
Clinical neuropsychologist Alyssa Weakley (Gregory Urquiaga/嘿嘿视频)

Assistive technology supports independent living

, chief of the  at , said maintaining independence throughout an older adult鈥檚 lifetime can be challenging, especially with multiple chronic conditions or cognitive decline. 

鈥淎cute events such as a fall and fracture or the loss of a caregiver can result in a need for increased daily support or institutionalization. Independent living takes community-based or family resources, innovative supportive technologies and a willingness of the older adult to accept assistance when needed,鈥 she explained. 鈥淗elping to devise a plan as a person ages for possible eventualities assures that the older adult remains in control of the decisions that would be made for their care.鈥

showed the many older adults would need to make changes to their home in order to remain safe. Young said that is where technology can help.

鈥淒r. Weakley鈥檚 innovative work is very exciting because she is using technology to support families in ways that are both practical and meaningful. Technology can help organize, coordinate and communicate information that is critical for wellbeing in daily life for both people with dementia and their families,鈥 Young added. 

Older woman stands in dining room
Leeann Patton experiences short-term memory loss, so she uses I-Care to help remember things like doctor appointments. (Gregory Urquiaga/嘿嘿视频)

Older adults undergo pilot study testing user-friendliness

Weakley conducted multiple rounds of iterative interface development with experts, individuals with cognitive impairment and caregivers. She then launched a pilot intervention with cognitively impaired individuals and remote caregivers to assess the usability and feasibility of I-Care.   

Leeann Patton, who struggles to remember things such as doctor appointments, enrolled in the pilot. The 84-year-old was thrilled when Weakley showed up at her Citrus Heights home with an all-in-one computer with the I-Care software that connected with her sister who lived in Southern California. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 in the dining room area on the table, right out where I can use it with no problem,鈥 Patton explained. 鈥It backs me up where I鈥檝e lost cognition and puts me back in charge of what I鈥檝e forgot.鈥

Weakley said Patton not only caught on quickly, but soon identified a need Weakley had not thought of 鈥 adding a smart watch.

鈥淪he would think of something while in her bedroom, but when she walked to the computer, she forgot why she was there. A big gap needed to be solved,鈥 Weakley said.

Patton, who called the system 鈥渁 reference manual for your mind,鈥 was enthusiastic that her idea would be incorporated into the project.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just hard to believe! I鈥檓 honored so much just to be part of this,鈥 Patton said. 鈥淚鈥檓 also grateful for the brain God gave me. He must have known I was going to need to do this.鈥

Hands holding sensors
Small vibration sensors plug into a wall outlet and can map an older adult鈥檚 daily routine by recording various vibrations generated by activities such as taking medication or getting out of bed. (Gregory Urquiaga/嘿嘿视频)
Sensors in use in a bathroom. The readouts are on a laptop computer on the sink.
Here, the sensors are plugged into the wall and can detect activity on the sink and the floor. The laptop shows vibrations for medication, walking and talking. (Gregory Urquiaga/嘿嘿视频)

Importance of technological innovation in senior care

Patton is considered an end user 鈥 the person who will use a particular product 鈥 of the technology that Weakley is developing. User friendliness is indispensable in any technological endeavor. Because the satisfaction of end users can determine the fate of a new technology, researchers find immense value in collaborating with those who will ultimately utilize it, co-designing solutions to glean valuable insights.

This feedback takes on greater importance as Weakley鈥檚 research evolves to include sensor technology. With a network of sensors in one鈥檚 home, data can be collected as inhabitants live their lives. In early 2023, Weakley teamed up with , an engineering professor at . Pan has worked on sensors her entire career focusing on how to make them non-intrusive and ubiquitous, but also scalable and reliable.

Pan developed small vibration sensors, roughly the size of a prescription pill bottle. They simply plug into a wall outlet and can fit underneath a nightstand or next to bathroom sink. They essentially map an older adult鈥檚 daily routine by recording various vibrations generated by activities such as taking medication or getting out of bed. 

鈥淧eople touch things all the time, which gives us an opportunity to capture their health data unobtrusively and continuously,鈥 Pan said. 鈥淗ow a person perceives privacy is also very important. If we put something that looks like a camera, people may think their privacy is being intruded, and act differently in the area, and we might not be able to capture their behavior data accurately. I didn鈥檛 realize how important that was before I met Dr. Weakley.鈥

A man works on a laptop in a bathroom
Dong Yoon Lee, a Ph.D. student in computer science at UC Merced, demonstrates how the sensors work in a bathroom. (Gregory Urquiaga/嘿嘿视频)

Invisible technology and privacy protection

Pan wants the technology to be as invisible as possible, so that people won鈥檛 change their behavior at home. The algorithms they are developing can identify an activity and then visualize the information in the I-Care system so that a remote caregiver can 鈥渨atch鈥 what鈥檚 happening in real time. 

鈥淒id my mom get out of bed this morning? Did she take her medicine? Has she fallen? These are the lingering doubts that weigh on caregivers who don鈥檛 live in the same home as their family member,鈥 Weakley said.

Because older adults have shared their privacy concerns with Weakley, Pan鈥檚 technology allows researchers to monitor activity without revealing sensitive information, such as a phone conversation.

鈥淚nstead of directly capturing information a human can understand, the sensors collect information only artificial intelligence can understand,鈥 Pan added.

Making the data understandable by a human user is where 嘿嘿视频 computer scientist  comes in. Wang is an expert on human-computer interaction. His visualization interface turns the vibrations into an image that makes sense to users of different roles and needs.

鈥淭his data pretty much means nothing [until it is] processed and contextualized to make the information more actionable. We must convert it so that the caregiver knows how to best offer care to the older adult,鈥 Wang said.

Hands holding a smartphone during a video call
I-Care includes a calendar, a to-do list and a messaging center where care partners can send messages and make video calls. (Gregory Urquiaga/嘿嘿视频)

Plug-and-play version a goal

Weakley said she hopes to deploy her technology in people鈥檚 homes within the next two years.

Her collaborators are aiming for a plug-and-play system that companies want to invest in and people want to use to connect with their families.

鈥淭his is just the beginning,鈥 Pan explained. 鈥淚n the next 10 years, we鈥檒l see the many dramatic changes in the relationship between the human and machine worlds. It鈥檚 both a challenge and an opportunity for us to make it a safer world for people who need care.鈥

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