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Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Elderly Care at Home gets EU boost

Care at Home for the elderly gets a significant boost with the announcement of
a consortium of 20 partners from European universities, public bodies and private companies to develop improved technology that should allow vulnerable older people to continue to live independently at home.

The Service Orientated Programmable Smart Environments for Older Europeans (SOPRANO) project is part-EU funded and aims to develop IT based assisted living services that promote the independence of older people, improve their quality of life and address the issue of ageing.

Mike Hodges, the Research and Development Director at Tunstall, the private company leading the research project, said: 'Against a background of accelerating demographic ageing across Europe, the latest telecare and telehealth solutions will play a pivotal role in helping to relieve some of the growing pressure on healthcare providers. Tunstall is proud to be leading this cutting-edge project which is addressing these key issues.'

The project will demonstrate how to use telecare technology, Information Technology (IT) and mobile communications to develop new community-based models of care and support. The research hopes to advance global knowledge in remote diagnostics, semantic IT, Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) location, and radar and integration architectures. 600 users will test the viability of these technologies in real homes.

The project will have two goals: to develop new ways of integrating assistive technology, telecare and telehealth solutions into users' homes to provide assistance; and to investigate the motor, sensory and cognitive difficulties experienced by older people and the best vision, voice or sensory-based means of communicating with users.

SOPRANO hopes to investigate the development of a fully networked home environment where integrated appliances support users in carrying out their everyday activities, and advanced telecare and telehealth solutions can monitor well-being to ensure that assistance is provided when required.

It is hoped that such low-level, round-the-clock telecare technology will offer a cost-effective alternative to traditional care, while also ensuring users get the support they need in the familiarity of their home environment.'

What such technology systems will never be able to offer though is real face to face meaningful human interaction and for many eldery people this can be the differenec between just living and enjoying a quality life. The development of these technology solutions to the problems of caring for the elderly must be supported and encouraged but we must never forget that the elderly, like the rest of us, need the warmth of human companionship and this is something that more traditional forms of care , at their best, have provided. The challenge is to develop systems of care which can meet these full range of needs.
http://www.tunstall.co.uk/

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