Thinking outside the box: New technologies in aged care
By 2020, your staff could be using augmented reality glasses to assess residents, while advanced thermostats adjust room temperature based on who’s in the room.
By 2020, your staff could be using augmented reality glasses to assess residents, while advanced thermostats adjust room temperature based on who’s in the room.
While falling represents a serious risk in aged care management in Australia, new technology made possible by the IoT is offering solutions.
Telehealth can provide more autonomy to elderly Australians and aged care providers in remote areas, a priority with proposed changes to aged care funding.
By increasing patient autonomy, intelligent virtual assistants will have a number of benefits for aged care providers in Australia.
The IoT is a new, powerful trend, and it’s time aged care providers start to think about how it could prove useful to operations.
3D printing is commonly associated with design and product development, but the technology is proving to have nearly limitless applications.
Want to learn about how three substantially different technologies apply to the aged care sector?
Telehealth is a term that may be confusing for many, but it’s important to understand how it could change medicine – and aged care.
Telehealth will likely come to play an important role in not just aged care Down Under, but the wider Australian healthcare sector.
Technology will come to play an even more important role in aged care over the next few years, helping providers and carers alike.