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How can technology be used to meet the needs of an ageing society?

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Like most developed nations, the UK’s population is ageing: by 2030, one in five people in the UK (21.8%) will be aged 65 or over. 

But although we are living longer, we are not necessarily living more healthily. Long-term conditions like heart disease, diabetes and COPD are placing pressure on the UK’s National Health Service (NHS), accounting for 50% of all GP appointments and 70% of all hospital bed days. Their treatment and care absorbs 70% of acute and primary care budgets in England.

New technologies can support the effective delivery of health and social care; enabling early intervention and avoiding the need for more complex care, hospitalisation and ambulance call outs. Such technology is scalable, cost-effective and empowers individuals to take control of their own health and allows them to live independently for longer.  

Gavin Bashar, UK & Ireland managing director at Tunstall Healthcare, discusses the benefits of technology in supporting an ageing population and helping vulnerable people live independently for longer. 

The benefits of technology 

Devices that once seemed like science fiction are being used to support vulnerable people to live safer, healthier and more enjoyable lives as they age, whether at home or in group living environments. Relatively low-cost telecare systems can automatically raise a call for help if they sense someone has fallen, or alert a sleeping carer if the person they care for experiences a seizure. This 24 hour support can help to avoid hospital admission, delay and prevent the need for residential care, and reduce carer burnout as the people they care for are monitored consistently for changes in behaviour and emergency events.

Existing solutions can also support the effective delivery of healthcare at home; for example, remote patient monitoring (RPM) enables early intervention and care to be person-centred, rather than place-based. 

Digital technologies have tremendous potential to improve the lives of an ageing population. They can enhance the services on offer, giving people greater independence and control over their care and are proven to help support wellbeing. They can free up the time for more face-to face care, and help care providers to operate more efficiently, so they can do more to look after those they support and their employees.

The power of data

Raising awareness of the technology solutions available within the health and social care sector and developing an understanding of the way data is collected, stored and processed is vital. The wider digital transformation and the application of data analytics is now seen as essential to the smarter management of operations, allocation of resources, collaboration across teams and services and ultimately, better delivery of care.

With the  digital frameworks in place, the integration of technology can become focused on the citizen, their choices, their health, their care, where institutions no longer work in silo and can provide better outcomes for citizens. It is in this context that the digital transformation can enable innovation in terms of service design, to meet the needs of an ageing population and enable new models of care to be developed and scaled up. 

Next steps

Investing time in exploring existing and emerging technology, and educating health and social care professionals is key to enabling us to shape the services of the future and embrace the opportunities presented by digital solutions. By educating staff about the benefits, we can ensure all stakeholders can commit with confidence to the transformation of services. 

As technology continues to touch every aspect of modern life, we must not miss the chance to harness its power to support our ageing population’s health, wellbeing and quality of life. 

For more information please visit www.tunstall.co.uk/telecare-solutions

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Childhood loneliness linked to increased risk of dementia, study finds

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Childhood loneliness increases the risk of dementia in later life, according to new research.

Adults who recalled being lonely and without a close friend in childhood faced a 41 per cent higher risk of developing dementia, even if they were no longer lonely as adults.

People who frequently felt lonely without close friends during youth showed accelerated cognitive decline — a worsening of memory and thinking — and started middle age with lower scores on these skills.

Researchers from universities in China, Australia and the US, including Harvard and Boston universities, analysed data from 13,592 Chinese adults tracked from June 2011 to December 2018.

The critical factor was the subjective feeling of loneliness itself. Those who reported often feeling lonely as children had a 51 per cent higher dementia risk, even if some had close friends.

However, those who only lacked close friends but did not feel lonely showed no significant difference in risk.

Nearly half of roughly 1,400 adults in the study reported being lonely and without close friends during childhood.

The 4.2 per cent who experienced both faced the highest risk of cognitive decline.

The link to dementia remained strong even for people who were no longer lonely in adulthood, suggesting early-life isolation can have lasting effects on brain health.

During childhood, the brain develops rapidly and is vulnerable to harm. Loneliness acts as a chronic stressor, flooding the developing brain with harmful hormones that can damage memory centres, and it reduces stimulation from social play and peer interaction that helps build robust neural networks.

A separate 2024 study of more than 10,000 older adults found that specific childhood hardships — including poverty, disruptive home environments or parental addiction — were directly linked to poorer cognitive function later in life.

Youth loneliness appears to be rising, partly linked to widespread social media use.

Among girls, 64 per cent aged five to seven, 67 per cent aged eight to 10, and 73 per cent aged 11 to 13 reported feelings of loneliness last year. More than a quarter of boys aged 11 to 17 in the US report feeling lonely.

Children face growing social isolation, with one in four Americans now eating every meal alone — a rate that has surged by over 50 per cent since 2003. Sharing meals with friends and family helps build bonds and positive memories in youth.

Fewer children are playing outside or joining team sports.

A recent study reported that one in three children do not play outside on school days, and one in five do not do so even at weekends.

The 2024 research found a direct, dose-dependent relationship between childhood adversity and cognitive problems in adults — the greater the early trauma, the greater the later risk.

For each significant increase in early trauma, individuals faced an eight per cent higher risk of daily memory issues and scored lower on objective tests of mental speed and focus.

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Don’t miss you essential monthly agetech update

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Your essential monthly update on agetech’s progress

Welcome to your monthly snapshot of the facts, figures, opinions, trends and challenges shaping the development of agetech.

Our new monthly tracker report aims to provide an concise update for busy agetech professionals on the many factors influencing your work.

Here you will find a concise breakdown of deals, developments and opportunities from the last 30 days; and insight and opinion from leading thinkers in the field.

We hope you find something useful and/or inspiring below – and welcome any feedback about what else you’d like to see included.

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Snoring, silence, and the menopause taboo: The hidden health crisis affecting millions

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By Professor Ama Johal, clinical lead and dental sleep expert at Aerox Health

During menopause, it’s very common for women to notice significant changes to their sleep patterns and experience things like restless nights, loud snoring, or simply waking up feeling exhausted.

What most don’t realise, however, is that these symptoms can signal something far more serious – obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA), one of the most impactful and consequential sleep-related breathing disorders.

Women across the world are unknowingly fighting an uphill battle. Around 90 per cent of females with moderate to severe sleep apnoea remain undiagnosed.

This collective lack of awareness is due to a plethora of factors including archaic taboos around the subject and lack of education or omission of menopause in sexual education.

Ultimately, this combination leaves women underprepared and vulnerable to the biological, social and medical realities associated with the menopause.

Now more than ever, we must confront this silence head-on and recognise the hidden sleep crisis affecting so many women globally and the opportunity to address it.

The hidden sleep crisis

Snoring that develops or worsens during menopause can progress into OSA due to a decline in estrogen and progesterone which reduces muscle tone in the throat and in turn makes the obstruction or collapse of the airways more likely during sleep.

Yet this link between menopause and sleep disorders remains largely overlooked, leaving millions of women undiagnosed, untreated, and unaware that their sleep struggles are more than just “part of getting older”.

In my practice, I see the consequences of this misunderstanding far too often.

I hear from many female patients who have been suffering in silence, without the knowledge that they could seek help. In fact, I often encounter the common misconception that snoring is a man’s issue.

This preconceived notion perpetuates a persistent gender bias in sleep-related health research.

As ENT consultant and sleep surgeon at University College London hospitals, Ryan Chin Taw Cheong recently highlighted, the development of snoring is reason enough to consult your doctor. It’s time for this pervasive issue to emerge from the dark.

So why don’t women seek help?

When considering why many women do not seek help for their symptoms, there are two overarching reasons.

Firstly, the information and knowledge is not widely available for sufferers to realise that snoring can be a medical issue which can be assessed and subsequently readily treated.

Secondly, there is a potent stigma surrounding both the menopause and snoring which is an inhibiting factor amongst sufferers, discouraging open discussion.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, menopause is not included in traditional sex education in schools. Being unaware of what is ‘normal’ and what could require medical attention is widespread amongst my patients with sleep disorders, yet this information is not freely disseminated outside of clinics.

Unfortunately, cognitive fog and irritability – symptoms of snoring and obstructive sleep apnoea – are too often written off as stress, anxiety or ‘just the menopause’.

Avoiding sharing symptoms with medical providers, combined with online misinformation, often results in individuals suffering in silence or worse, turning to unregulated miracle menopause cures that exacerbate the risks of undiagnosed OSA.

These so-called ‘cures’ reinforce the harmful notion that the menopause is a defect which needs to be fixed rather than a natural life stage.

The health costs of ignoring snoring

A breadth of research links untreated OSA to cardiovascular disease, hypertension and cognitive decline.

However, aside from the medical risks, snoring and sleep apnoea can have profound social and emotional consequences.

For women, the shame in snoring, a symptom often mischaracterised as a ‘male issue’, can significantly affect self esteem and mental health.

Partners may also suffer if the snoring is disruptive to their sleep, in some instances causing rifts in relationships and a phenomena known as ‘sleep divorces’ (sleeping in separate beds or rooms).

In fact, according to a recent study commissioned by 32Co, 47% of recently divorced Brits cite interrupted sleep linked to snoring or sleep disorders as contributing to their relationship breakdowns, with 85 per cent believing ‘sleep divorces’ contributed to ultimate separation.

Sleep specialists seek to manage and monitor the symptoms of sleep disorders and OSA to minimise disruption to an individual’s personal and public life.

Screening menopausal women for OSA is a preventative measure which leads to informed patients. It is not simply about getting better sleep but about the long-term health outcomes.

Breaking the silence: what needs to change

Drawing on the stories of those I meet in my clinic, I would like to outline five steps that we can take to address this silent epidemic.

First, the menopause and associated symptoms should be included in a comprehensive sex and health education.

This could be provided both in schools’ curricula and made readily available at health services catering to adults.

Second, throughout the course of history women’s issues have been chronically underserved.

More resources can be funnelled into conducting research to help us better understand the impact of the menopause on women’s physical and mental health.

Future research would also help to neutralise the gender bias of previous studies.

Third, launching public health campaigns and workplace initiatives to encourage employers to recognise sleep disorders as a significant element of menopause will help build awareness and reduce the impact of stigmas.

Fourth, myth-busting, shattering taboos, and normalising discussion about the menopause will be key.

We must view snoring as a gender neutral issue rather than a male stereotype and denounce harmful rhetoric and jokes that perpetuate stigma.

Fifth, we must better equip more localised healthcare providers up and down the country to both diagnose and treat OSA effectively.

Sleep disorders are not niche issues but a major public health concern with potentially severe consequences.

Quality of life amongst my patients is inextricably linked with sleep quality.

Recognising the relationship between snoring and OSA and the menopause is not simply about pathologising a natural stage of life, but providing women with the information, respect and medical care they deserve.

Only through more transparency and collaboration amongst researchers, educators and clinicians can we hope to close the gender gap in sleep medicine and bring this hidden crisis to light.

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