New technology offers home option to aging seniors
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Frances Bolen, 83, receives her medicine from an
automated dispenser, part of the Senior Safe at Home program
administered by Sears Methodist Retirement System. UMNS photos by John
Gordon.
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By John Gordon*
Nov. 13, 2007 | ABILENE, Texas (UMNS)
As aging baby boomers increasingly face the difficult decision of
whether to live independently or seek nursing assistance, a Texas
company is tapping the Internet to help seniors stay in their homes
longer — with an emphasis on safety.
Senior Safe at Home combines the latest medical technology and new
computer software and is being rolled out by Sears Methodist Retirement
System, which operates nursing homes and assisted living centers in
eight cities in Texas.
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Registered nurse Tanya Cornell keeps an eye on patients thousands of miles away from a monitoring center in Abilene.
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Backers say the program is several years in development and offers a
timely option in a nation where a baby boomer turns 50 every seven
seconds. "The fastest growing population in this country are those
people who are over age 85," said Sandy Perry, vice president of the
Abilene-based program.
Senior Safe at Home links automated medicine dispensers, fall sensors
and computer terminals for seniors to enter their vital signs and get
reminders of their next doctors’ appointments. If they’re not feeling
well, they can use the system to talk to a nurse at the program’s
national client service center in Abilene.
"There is that security that we are there," said Cornell. "We’re not going to always have to call 911."
Relatives also can check in using an Internet web portal. "It will
let them know if any of our alert systems have been triggered and what
kind of intervention occurred as a result of that," said Perry.
Good medicine
The automated medicine dispensers are designed to eliminate errors
that can land seniors in the hospital. "If they can’t remember if
they’ve taken the medication, they will go ahead and take an extra one,
or they won’t take it at all," said Tanya Cornell, a registered nurse
who works at the national service center. "It is a very big, big issue."
Frances Bolen, 83, of Abilene uses one of the dispensers for her arthritis medicine.
"At first, it irritated me because I’ve always been real independent.
And I thought if I can’t take medicine without help, I’m in a bad way,"
she said. "But I realized I needed to, especially when you take that
much."
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Dick Evatt, 73, checks his blood pressure before transmitting the data to the client service center.
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Dick Evatt, 73, also of Abilene, enters his weight, blood pressure and
other information in a home computer. The software even asks if he has
had a stressful day. His doctor recommended the system because Evatt has
a heart murmur and is alone much of the day while his wife is at work.
"I think this technology is on the cutting edge of making your baby
boomers feel a whole lot safer at home," he said. "It puts you at ease
much more and it just lets you rest easier."
Perry says falls are among the biggest risks for seniors at home.
Senior Safe at Home partners with local health-care providers who check
homes for tripping hazards and other dangers. Fall sensors can alert the
national service center even if a senior is not able to push a button.
"If you can get to someone who’s fallen within an hour of that fall,
they have a much, much better chance of recovering fully from it," she
said. "But if they’re on the floor and you don’t get to them for as long
as 12 hours or a long period of time, then they’re much more likely not
to be able to go home."
Cost-effective
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Vice president Sandy Perry says the new system has the
potential to help safeguard aging seniors in their homes worldwide.
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Perry believes the program is cost-effective and can help aging seniors
to safely stay in their own homes for an additional six months to a
year.
"We don’t have the manpower to continue to do everything with
individuals in people’s homes," she said. "We are very excited about the
potential of Senior Safe at Home to really revolutionize the way care
is provided to older people around the world."
Sears Methodist began in 1966 as a mission of The United Methodist
Church in Texas. Launched with its first retirement community in
Abilene, the system has expanded to serve 1,800 residents in 12
locations across Texas.
*Gordon is a freelance writer and producer in Marshall, Texas.
News media contact: Fran Coode Walsh, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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Resources
Senior Safe at Home
Sears Methodist Retirement System
Center on Aging and Older Adult Ministries |