Alberta-Based Project Deploys Consumer Health Monitoring Technology to Pilot an Innovative Home Environment for Aging Populations
The HealthTech Home project, initiated by the Brenda Strafford Foundation and Health Cities, aims to improve aging in place for seniors through innovative technology solutions in a residential setting. This initiative responds to the growing need for effective health support as Canada’s Baby Boomer generation ages. Best Buy Canada is the first technology partner, working to integrate consumer technology in a BSF-owned condo unit, ensuring older adults can age safely at home while monitoring their health. The project also establishes the HealthTech Home Innovation Council to guide policy and technology deployment.
- Collaboration with Best Buy Canada enhances the project, leveraging its expertise in technology to support aging in place.
- The establishment of the HealthTech Home Innovation Council will guide policy and funding decisions, ensuring greater impact.
- Aging in place technology can potentially lower healthcare costs while improving the quality of life for seniors.
- The project relies on the successful integration of various technologies, which may present challenges.
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As the largest generation of Canadians, the Baby Boomer Generation, reaches the senior age demographic, aging at home has become a priority in the health sector. Recent studies have shown aging at home can lower the cost to the health care system while enabling older adults to remain safe, independent, and connected to their homes and communities. However, understanding the technology required to support older adults to age at home is not always a straightforward selection, as many products are costly or do not integrate directly with existing consumer or health systems.
The HealthTech Home project creates a sandbox environment deployed within a BSF-owned condo unit for independent older adults that is connected to one of their continuing care homes. Health technology solutions are selected and installed to monitor the health of an independent-living condo tenant over the course of one year in an effort to slow, or reverse, any decline in health, and to aid aging in place. The selection, implementation, and evaluation of technology will build a framework that supports aging in place. Currently, little framework exists to inform technology implementation for aging care in a residential setting.
In addition to validating consumer and health technologies, this project has established the
“Today’s generation of aging seniors have different expectations around remaining in their homes and maintaining their independence as they age," says
"We know that enabling seniors to age in place, where they are comfortable and have the support of their communities, leads to better health outcomes,” says
“Best Buy Health is driven by the belief that technology can make life better— at any age, for any need,” says
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About Health Cities
Health Cities is a Canadian not-for-profit corporation that works with clinicians, innovators, philanthropic organizations, and companies to develop new models of care that can drive better health outcomes and economic growth in the health sector. Our focus is on transforming innovations from our health sector into solutions that have commercial application and global relevance, adopting them for impact locally and scaling them for export to global markets.
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Media Inquiries:
Health Cities
Email: media@healthcities.ca
Phone: 780-885-0458
Email: julie.arnold@theBSF.ca
Phone: 403-536-8682
Email: media@bestbuycanada.ca
Phone: 604-809-3416
Source: Health Cities
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