2016 June Newsletter – Smart Home for Elderly

2017 March Newsletter – Utilizing technology-enabled devices to live a Healthy Golden Age

Census and Statistic Department, HKSAR had released the report of 2016 Population by-census. The figures revealed that Hong Kong becomes an aging society with a very rapid pace. We have a population of 1,160,000 with [...]

By | March 1st, 2017|Categories: News, News1|0 Comments

Singapore government has tested a Smart Elderly Monitoring and Alert System in 12 government rental flats from June to November 2015. This system was developed by Housing and Development Board (HDB) and four Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) in Singapore.

It comes with four components:

  1. Motion sensor- the system tracks the living habits of the elderly in their homes, and alerts their caregivers through alarms and text messages when irregular patterns appear, such as when there is an unusually long period of inactivity.
  2. Door contact sensor- check if the elderly in inside or outside the flat.
  3. A wearable panic button which the elderly can press in times of distress.
  4. Home gateway- collect data from the sensors and panic button, and send to the caregivers.

Smart Home Exhibition Panel_elderly_amended_v4

According to an HDB survey, 10 of 12 households felt that it was elder-friendly and easy to use.  The survey also showed that the users did not feel that their privacy has been compromised. Among the first to try out the system was pre-school teacher Doris and her 78-year-old mother.  Doris said that she was not at home most of the time, this system helped her a lot and she was much less worried about her mother now.
singapore-system-daughter-and-mother

Because of the success of the pilot test, this Smart Elderly Monitoring and Alert System will be rolled out to over 3,000 households in the Yuhua region starting from April, 2016.

Another project under clinical trial was a home based tele-rehabilitation service, which helped the recovery of post-stroke patients undergoing rehabilitation treatments.  Patients connect with therapists through a virtual platform run on a tablet while videos and motion sensors guide and measure their rehabilitation exercises.

By | June 1st, 2016|News, News1|0 Comments

About the Author:

Dr. Philip Fung is the founder of Safe Concept. He is a seasoned human resources consultant and has more than 20 years experience in leadership development and organisational development. In the last ten years, his focus was to assist NGOs in strategic planning and service innovation. Through his interaction with social workers, middle and senior management of NGOs, he recognized the growing and unfilled needs of elderly, people with disabilities and chronic diseases. As Hong Kong moved further into an aging society, we need new paradigms and intervention strategy. He believes e-health products and related services could be an answer.

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