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Ageing population, care services and needs for ambient technology Päivi Topo Email: [email protected]
13

Topo: Aging population and AmI

May 07, 2015

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Health & Medicine

Iiro Jantunen

Päivi Topo, academy research fellow, National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL)

Aging population, care services and needs for ambient technology.
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Page 1: Topo: Aging population and AmI

Ageing population, care services and needs for ambient technology

Päivi Topo

Email: [email protected]

Page 2: Topo: Aging population and AmI

Population is ageing globally

19/05/2009 Ageing population, care services and needs for ambient technology / Päivi Topo 2

Source: World Population Ageing: 1950-2050. UN.

Page 3: Topo: Aging population and AmI

19/05/2009 Ageing population, care services and needs for ambient technology / Päivi Topo 3

Source: World Population Ageing: 1950-2050. UN.

Page 4: Topo: Aging population and AmI

Significant differences among people in old age

• Go GoPeople no or minor chronic health problems

• Slow Go• People with problems in health and/or

functioning that cause some challenges for daily life

• No Go• People with severe problems in health and functioning, dependence on others in daily life

Page 5: Topo: Aging population and AmI

Go Go and ambient technology• Prevention is the main issue:

Nutrition & diet & weight controlBlood pressureSports & daily physical activitySleepSocial activities Cognitive activities

• Support in their social activities and care responsibilities

• Changes already in fucntioning because of normal ageing need to be taken into account in user requirements

Page 6: Topo: Aging population and AmI

Slow Go and ambient technology

• self-care of acute & chronic disease (medication, blood pressure, blood sugar etc.)

• "self-rehabilitation" (physical, cognitive, psychological exercises & feed back)

• social engangement

• Many "slow go people" also care for their frail spouses or other relatives

• Time to learn to use technology; motivation to do it depends on how necessary it is

Page 7: Topo: Aging population and AmI

No Go and ambient technology

• self-care of acute & severe chronic disease (medication, blood pressure, blood sugar etc.)

• "self-rehabilitation" (physical, cognitive, psychological exercices & feed back)

• social engangement

• due dependence on help from the others communication & information delivery very important: easier to organise within family, more complex if health & social care services needed

• cognitive problems common: difficulties in learning > easy to use is basic requirement

Page 8: Topo: Aging population and AmI

People with dementia as an example of Slow Go & No Go

• 30 million people with dementia worldwide: by 2050, over 100 million.

• Much of the increase will be in developing countries.

• More than 60% of people with dementia live in developing countries, by 2040 71%.

• The fastest growth in the elderly population is taking place in China, India, and south Asian and western Pacific.

• In western countries people with dementia use the vast majority of services for the ageing population: their care is far more expensive than cancer treatment

19/05/2009 Ageing population, care services and needs for ambient technology / Päivi Topo 8

Source: Alzheimer´s Disease International

Page 9: Topo: Aging population and AmI

Prevalence of dementing illnesses in Finland by age

Age group Prevalence (%)

65-69 2,3

70-74 4,2

75-79 8,6

80-84 13,0

85-89 25,3

90+ 33,5

19/05/2009 Ageing population, care services and needs for ambient technology / Päivi Topo 9

Page 10: Topo: Aging population and AmI

Can technology help?

• Dementia caused by Alzheimers disease and other similar disease weakens cognitive abilities widely

• Gradually the person has problems in short term memory, in orientation, perception, counting etc.

• Causes severe difficulties in daily life & need for 24 hour care

• Technology has been successfully used to help family carers, social & health care personell

• Topo P. Technology studies to meet the needs of people with dementia and their caregivers: a literature review. Journal of Applied Gerontology 2009.

Page 11: Topo: Aging population and AmI

Can technology help?• Little is known about potential to directly support the person

with dementia to be more indepent or to have better quality of life

• Existing studies show promising results

• Good solutions needed for help in maintaining abilities & cognition, to help in orientation, to improve safety at home and in compensating skills that have been lost or are in danger to be lost

• This kind of approach can help in decreasing needs of care & cutting costs of care BUT it requires that personal help is available when needed

• Topo P. Technology studies to meet the needs of people with dementia and their caregivers: a literature review. Journal of Applied Gerontology 2009.

• Topo P. & Östlund B. (eds): Dementia, design and technology - Time to get involved. IOS Press, 2009 (available at: www.thl.fi/bookshop)

Page 12: Topo: Aging population and AmI

Unnecessary disability in ageing societies

• Barrier free design & accessibility are essential

• Technology now used to compensate problems caused by non-accessibile design of built environments

• Service needs & needs for assistance are often caused by non-accessible environment:

UNNECESSARY DISABILITY

• Ambient technology has huge potential in improving actual environments of old people towards optimal environment

Page 13: Topo: Aging population and AmI

Thank you!