Skip to main content

LifePod believes smart home tech can help facilitate the challenges of eldercare

Eldercare is about to become a big deal: Tens of millions of baby boomers are about to cross retirement age, after all — and there are plenty more who already have. Fortunately for them, new technologies might just make their life better. But which ones?

To dig into the relationship between tech and healthcare, smart-home caregiving service LifePod Solutions announced plans for a study with the American Heart Association’s Center for Health Technology and Innovation to address chronic heart conditions and not only collect valuable information but hopefully help people with those conditions. LifePod’s service helps patients stick to the Center’s health management plans, called CarePlans, offering voice reminders to take medicine and prompts about eating and excercise. The plan works with most modern smart speakers.

The study will examine those health-management CarePlans to figure out if people who follow them live healther, longer lives. Taking regular routine medicine is a key part of that; people who miss their meds results in about $300 billion in healthcare spending that could be avoided.

“We’re excited to collaborate with LifePod on this study and we look forward to applying our unique cardiovascular research expertise to help improve health education and health engagement,” Patrick Wayte, the senior vice president of the Center for Health Technology and Innovation, said in a press release.

LifePod has been busy already. It already finished a pilot program with the Commonwealth Care Alliance (CCA) that led the organization to expand LifePod’s caregiving service to about 500 CCA members.

We are proud to collaborate with the association with the goal of enabling patients with heart conditions to live longer, healthier lives,” Lifepod CEO Stuart Patterson said in a statement. “Our tests have shown that the personalized nature and intuitive UI of LifePod’s proactive-voice service can empower caregivers to address the gaps in behavioral and social support that contribute to medication and behavioral nonadherence, potentially extending patients’ lives and saving providers billions in avoidable costs.”

Regarding the specifics, LifePod initiates pre-scheduled routines through a LifePod-powered smart speaker. Not only does it help the recipient, but caregivers don’t have to carry a notebook worth of reminders. The Care Team Support function can send reports not only to caregivers but also to loved ones. Voice prompts can trigger, hopefully, medication, behavioral therapies, hydration and appointment reminders. There’s also a limited amount of integration with smart home devices, so your given charge can turn lights on and off.

LifePod says the caregiving market is something like $280 million, and the company recently won the 2019 Caregiver Friendly Award at the Voice Summit 2019 Conference in Boston in July. We’ll keep an eye on these things and see how eldercare progresses over time.

Clayton Moore
Clayton Moore’s interest in technology is deeply rooted in the work of writers like Warren Ellis, Cory Doctorow and Neal…
Apple to ditch its HomePod smart speaker but stick with mini version
HomePod

Apple will stop selling its HomePod smart speaker and instead focus on the smaller version of the device.

The company confirmed its decision to TechCrunch, adding that the larger version of the smart speaker will continue to be available until supplies run out.

Read more
5 ways a smart home can help you prepare for Valentine’s Day
Amazon Echo dressed up for Valentine's Day

With Valentine's Day nearly here, you might be scrambling for ideas -- especially if you've put off plans until the last minute. The good news is that your smart home can help with Valentine's Day planning, whether you're trying to set the mood, prepare a delicious meal, or just keep that special gift safe till you get home.
Use smart lights to set the mood
For a truly successful Valentine's Day date, you have to set the perfect mood. Smart lights are the key to doing this -- after all, no one wants to eat dinner under harsh fluorescents. Candlelight is better, but if you don't want to light a bunch of candles (or you aren't allowed to because of your apartment's rules), Philips Hue can help.

Hue Labs has a feature called "candlelight romance" that causes your smart lights to flicker just like candles. It can create the same ambiance without the fire risk. If you have Philips Hue smart lights, just go into the app and activate this setting to use its features.

Read more
Household electrical usage increased in 2020. Here’s how a smart home can help
data shows increase in household energy use 2020 sense home monitor feature 625x417 c

A report released by Sense has revealed that home energy usage increased dramatically throughout all of 2020. Of course, this doesn't come as much of a surprise -- with the quarantine and lockdown protocols ensuring most people stayed at home during this time, the average amount of energy used increased by 9.3%. This translated to an overall average increase of $127 by the end of the year, with the highest increase taking place during the spring and summer months.

U.S. customers overall paid an increase of $1.21 billion, but this added cost was not distributed evenly across the country. Five states in particular saw the highest increase in rates, with residents in New York and Massachusetts facing an increase three times that of Florida. As the pandemic spread throughout the country, demand for electricity continued to rise up to 22%.

Read more