Ask James Coughlin why he’s smiling these days and he’s likely to throw out 3 words that are spelling success for his privately owned senior housing development company:
- Millennials
Ask James Coughlin why he’s smiling these days and he’s likely to throw out 3 words that are spelling success for his privately owned senior housing development company:
Philips, a LeadingAge Silver Partner and CAST Supporter, made news in June for initiatives involving the launch of a new activity monitoring system and a partnership with a home health care franchise, research on ambient assisted living technologies for veterans, and positive outcomes associated with the company’s new medication adherence device.
Two new research studies, conducted on opposite ends of the globe, are illustrating the power of video communication to reduce antipsychotic drug use among older adults living with dementia.
CAST Executive Director Majd Alwan and CAST Patron Front Porch were in the spotlight recently when McKnight’s Long-Term Care News published a special supplement on “Technology: Changing the Future” as part of its June edition.
How do you feel about change? Bill Murray’s character in the movie “Groundhog Day,” stuck as he was in an endlessly repeating day, eventually comes to appreciate that “Anything different is good.” At the other end of the spectrum, as Robert Kennedy once observed, “Change has its enemies.” Change is always happening, everywhere, all the time. We may not like it, but it’s there, always percolating. That’s not a bad thing. After all, were it not for change we might still be living in caves and chasing dinner down with pointy sticks.
But while change is good, dealing with change on an organizational level can be challenging. The people in your senior care community get used to doing things a certain way, and have grown accustomed to a particular flow. When things happen to change that flow, people notice. When adopting new technology, this is more apparent than ever.
The introduction of new technology changes the way people work. New technology replaces the “old” ways of doing things. Technology replaces paper, manual processes and cumbersome touch points with a new streamlined and automated way of doing things. The change that comes along with technology is for the better – whether it’s for greater productivity or to drive revenue or to improve the way care is delivered to patients and residents in senior living communities. Nonetheless, it’s still change.
When adopting new technology, consider the following tips so employees on all levels can more effectively manage the change that comes along with it.
Change can be your friend. When adopting new technology, careful upfront planning and follow-through can make all the difference.
A special camera mounted onto regular eyeglasses could help older people with vision impairments decipher written text and perform other daily activities, according to researchers at the University of California, Davis.
A new report from CAST outlines 4 ways that providers of aging services can support a successful aging services business. Technology Trends & Implications on Construction, Expansion, and Update Projects summarizes the main themes that the CAST Commissioners addressed during their Spring 2016 meeting in Washington, DC.
Nineteen days into Older Americans Month (OAM), it is fitting that the May edition of Tech Time should focus on older consumers of aging services.
Two CAST Business Associates are taking time to educate providers of aging services about technology solutions that can help them engage residents and meet regulatory requirements. Here’s the latest from Keystone Technologies and HCS.
CAST Business Associates gained recognition recently for their achievements in the field of aging services technologies. Here’s the latest news from LG CNS, Harmony Healthcare International, RF Technologies, and STANLEY Healthcare.