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Passive Remote Monitoring Technologies’ Influence on Home Care Clients’ Ability to Stay Home: Multiprovincial Randomized Controlled Trial

Passive Remote Monitoring Technologies’ Influence on Home Care Clients’ Ability to Stay Home: Multiprovincial Randomized Controlled Trial

Participant group and inclusion criteria (eligible if all criteria are met) Home care clients Adult who is aged ≥65 years Requires home care and is at risk for higher levels of care as determined by the home care provider who makes these decisions Has a caregiver who is willing and able to receive the remote monitoring sensor notifications using a cell phone or a regular phone (ie, landline) Able to read and write in English or French Has the decisional capacity to consent or have a substitute decision-maker

Lorie Donelle, Bradley Hiebert, Grace Warner, Michael Reid, Jennifer Reid, Salimah Shariff, Emily Richard, Sandra Regan, Lori Weeks, Kathleen Ledoux

JMIR Aging 2025;8:e69107

Stakeholder Perspectives on In-home Passive Remote Monitoring to Support Aging in Place in the Province of New Brunswick, Canada: Rapid Qualitative Investigation

Stakeholder Perspectives on In-home Passive Remote Monitoring to Support Aging in Place in the Province of New Brunswick, Canada: Rapid Qualitative Investigation

However, a longer life span does not necessarily mean living longer in good health [3,4]. It is well-established that at a population level, the prevalence of chronic diseases and disabilities increases with age [4]. As a result, attention has shifted from a focus on increasing life spans to healthy aging, an approach that emphasizes the quality of life and functional ability, not just living longer [4].

Emily A Read, Danie A Gagnon, Lorie Donelle, Kathleen Ledoux, Grace Warner, Brad Hiebert, Ridhi Sharma

JMIR Aging 2022;5(2):e31486