HaCIRIC

It focuses on the way innovation in healthcare services, technology and infrastructure can help to address the challenges countries face in the future provision of healthcare – the need to meet expanding demand while controlling rising costs, improving quality and raising productivity.

HaCIRIC brings together four core partners (Imperial College London and the universities of Salford, Loughborough and Reading) and other partners from the UK and elsewhere. The factors shaping the introduction of telecare and telehealth, and their potential impact of on care services, forms an important element of its work.

HaCIRIC

HaCIRIC Contact

Ms. Bora Trimcev
HaCIRIC Programme Administrator
Imperial College Business School
South Kensington Campus
London SW7 2AZ

Tel: +44 (0)20 7594 3084
Email: b.trimcev@imperial.ac.uk

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Telecare Soapbox: The Tina and Mick Test

Editor Steve Hards muses on matters of ageism in equipment and service design.

In another forum I recently gave some feedback to an internet-based service company that what they were producing, aimed at older people – both the images they were using and the words they were using – gave the impression to me that they were somewhat ageist. It got me thinking about the difficulty for companies of designing and marketing to people of an age that you, or your team members, are not.

We are all familiar with the concept that ‘old’ is a movable feast and that old age starts at about 15 years older than you are, so it’s 50 for 35 year olds, 75 for 50 year olds and 100 for 85 year olds. However, the differences between people at 50 and 100 may or may not be significant. There is an expectation that… (more…)

Video: Telecare – the ethical debate

If there’s one thing I’d recommend all Telecare Aware readers to do this week it’s to set aside 13 minutes to watch a video from the UK’s Social Care Institute for Excellence (SCIE – pronounced ‘sky’). It’s not just because SCIE is one of those institutions set up by the previous Government which may not survive changes that will be brought in by the new one, but because the video, entitled Telecare – The ethical debate is excellent. [Note, it autoplays.]

There is an element of ‘looking at both sides’ to it, but the real value, as with the previously mentioned case studies from Newham, is in seeing how the telecare services are being used sensitively in the UK to support people who in previous generations would have been in institutions where everything was done for, and to, them.

If you have a further 10 minutes to watch another video, Telecare – providing more personalised care can be accessed from the Related Videos tab, to the bottom right of the above page. It puts telecare technologies into the general context of assistive technology for older and disabled people. (Readers from the USA will, no doubt, wince when they hear the technologies being referred to as AT&T.)

There is accompanying text and other materials on the SCIE video web page and, linked to the SCIE material, is an article in Community Care this week, Ethical issues in the use of telecare.