FEATURE
The Next Generation of Care
Stephen Cavanagh, Care Specialist for Ascom, discusses how technology that can integrate discreetly and seamlessly is transforming the sector and is set to power a new wave of care homes.
While a patient in a hospital may find comfort in being surrounded by technology that is helping to manage and monitor their care, the same sense of comfort would not be felt from this level of overt, oſten noisy and brightly lit technology by a resident if it was installed in a care home.
The challenge for care homes is far greater — technology needs to be discreet, not intrusive or hinder a resident’s feeling of independence. But it still needs to work just as hard.
Our partnership with Principle Care Homes is the perfect illustration of how technology can play a major, albeit more discreet role.
AN INVISIBLE ECOSYSTEM OF PROTECTION
AND SUPPORT Principle Care Homes, co-founded by brother-and-sister team Ashish and Nisha Goyal, has ambitious plans for how technology will be integral for not only resident care, but also how it will operate as a business when it opens its first purpose- built home.
“Of course, not all changes are subtle. But that doesn’t mean
the subtle use of data capture can’t deliver benefits.”
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In the words of Subhaan Iqbal, Head of Systems at Principle Care Homes, the company’s aim is to, “create a new generation of care homes, where technology creates an invisible ecosystem of protection and support for our residents, their loved ones and our team. To create an environment where everyone feels special.”
The key to achieving this is discreet, near-real-time data collection via deployment of sensors, cameras, Artificial Intelligence (AI) and associated management soſtware to unite and, essentially, turn data points into actionable insight.
www.tomorrowscare.co.uk
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