By Judith Graham JULY
24, 2020
Family
gatherings on Zoom and FaceTime. Online orders from grocery stores and
pharmacies. Telehealth appointments with physicians.
These
have been lifesavers for many older adults staying at home during the
coronavirus pandemic. But an unprecedented shift to virtual interactions has a
downside: Large numbers of seniors are unable to participate.
Among
them are older adults with dementia (14% of those 71 and older), hearing loss
(nearly two-thirds of those 70 and older) and impaired vision (13.5% of those
65 and older), who can have a hard time using digital devices and programs
designed without their needs in mind. (Think small icons, difficult-to-read
typefaces, inadequate captioning among the hurdles.)
Many
older adults with limited financial resources also may not be able to afford
devices or the associated internet service fees. (Half of seniors living alone
and 23% of those in two-person households are unable to afford basic necessities.)
Others are not adept at using technology and lack the assistance to learn.
During
the pandemic, which has hit older adults especially hard, this divide between
technology “haves” and “have-nots” has serious consequences.
Older
adults in the “haves” group have more access to virtual social interactions and
telehealth services, and more opportunities to secure essential supplies
online. Meanwhile, the “have-nots” are at greater risk of social isolation,
forgoing medical care and being without food or other necessary items.
Dr.
Charlotte Yeh, chief medical officer for AARP Services, observed difficulties
associated with technology this year when trying to remotely teach her
92-year-old father how to use an iPhone. She lives in Boston; her father lives
in Pittsburgh.
Yeh’s
mother had always handled communication for the couple, but she was in a
nursing home after being hospitalized for pneumonia. Because of the pandemic,
the home had closed to visitors. To talk to her and other family members, Yeh’s
father had to resort to technology.
But
various impairments got in the way: Yeh’s father is blind in one eye, with
severe hearing loss and a cochlear implant, and he had trouble hearing
conversations over the iPhone. And it was more difficult than Yeh expected to
find an easy-to-use iPhone app that accurately translates speech into captions.
Often,
family members would try to arrange Zoom meetings. For these, Yeh’s father used
a computer but still had problems because he could not read the very small
captions on Zoom. A tech-savvy granddaughter solved that problem by connecting
a tablet with a separate transcription program.
When
Yeh’s mother, who was 90, came home in early April, physicians treating her for
metastatic lung cancer wanted to arrange telehealth visits. But this could not
occur via cellphone (the screen was too small) or her computer (too hard to
move it around). Physicians could examine lesions around the older woman’s
mouth only when a tablet was held at just the right angle, with a phone’s
flashlight aimed at it for extra light.
“It was
like a three-ring circus,” Yeh said. Her family had the resources needed to
solve these problems; many do not, she noted. Yeh’s mother passed away in July;
her father is now living alone, making him more dependent on technology than
ever.
When
SCAN Health Plan, a Medicare Advantage plan with 215,000 members in California,
surveyed its most vulnerable members after the pandemic hit, it discovered that
about one-third did not have access to the technology needed for a telehealth
appointment. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services had expanded the use of telehealth in
March.
Other
barriers also stood in the way of serving SCAN’s members remotely. Many people
needed translation services, which are difficult to arrange for telehealth
visits. “We realized language barriers are a big thing,” said Eve Gelb, SCAN’s
senior vice president of health care services.
Nearly
40% of the plan’s members have vision issues that interfere with their ability
to use digital devices; 28% have a clinically significant hearing impairment.
“We
need to target interventions to help these people,” Gelb said. SCAN is
considering sending community health workers into the homes of vulnerable
members to help them conduct telehealth visits. Also, it may give members
easy-to-use devices, with essential functions already set up, to keep at home,
Gelb said.
Landmark
Health serves a highly vulnerable group of 42,000 people in 14 states, bringing
services into patients’ homes. Its average patient is nearly 80 years old, with
eight medical conditions. After the first few weeks of the pandemic, Landmark
halted in-person visits to homes because personal protective equipment, or PPE,
was in short supply.
Instead,
Landmark tried to deliver care remotely. It soon discovered that fewer than 25%
of patients had appropriate technology and knew how to use it, according to
Nick Loporcaro, the chief executive officer. “Telehealth is not the panacea,
especially for this population,” he said.
Landmark
plans to experiment with what he calls “facilitated telehealth”: nonmedical
staff members bringing devices to patients’ homes and managing telehealth
visits. (It now has enough PPE to make this possible.) And it, too, is looking
at technology that it can give to members.
One
alternative gaining attention is GrandPad, a tablet loaded with senior-friendly
apps designed for adults 75 and older. In July, the National PACE Association,
whose members run programs providing comprehensive services to frail seniors
who live at home, announced a partnership with GrandPad to encourage adoption
of this technology.
“Everyone
is scrambling to move to this new remote care model and looking for options,”
said Scott Lien, the company’s co-founder and chief executive officer.
PACE
Southeast Michigan purchased 125 GrandPads for highly vulnerable members after
closing five centers in March where seniors receive services. The devices have
been “remarkably successful” in facilitating video-streamed social and
telehealth interactions and allowing nurses and social workers to address
emerging needs, said Roger Anderson, senior director of operational support and
innovation.
Another
alternative is technology from iN2L (an acronym for It’s Never Too Late), a
company that specializes in serving people with dementia. In Florida, under
a new program sponsored
by the state’s Department of Elder Affairs, iN2L tablets loaded with
dementia-specific content have been distributed to 300 nursing homes and
assisted living centers.
The
goal is to help seniors with cognitive impairment connect virtually with
friends and family and engage in online activities that ease social isolation,
said Sam Fazio, senior director of quality care and psychosocial research at
the Alzheimer’s Association, a partner in the effort. But because of budget
constraints, only two tablets are being sent to each long-term care community.
Families
report it can be difficult to schedule adequate time with loved ones when only
a few devices are available. This happened to Maitely Weismann’s 77-year-old
mother after she moved into a short-staffed Los Angeles memory care facility in
March. After seeing how hard it was to connect, Weismann, who lives in Los
Angeles, gave her mother an iPad and hired an aide to ensure that mother and daughter
were able to talk each night.
Without
the aide’s assistance, Weismann’s mother would end up accidentally pausing the
video or turning off the device. “She probably wanted to reach out and touch
me, and when she touched the screen it would go blank and she’d panic,”
Weismann said.
What’s
needed going forward? Laurie Orlov, founder of the blog Aging
in Place Technology Watch, said nursing homes, assisted living
centers and senior communities need to install communitywide Wi-Fi services —
something that many lack.
“We
need to enable Zoom get-togethers. We need the ability to put voice technology
in individual rooms, so people can access Amazon Alexa or Google products,” she
said. “We need more group activities that enable multiple residents to
communicate with each other virtually. And we need vendors to bundle
connectivity, devices, training and service in packages designed for older
adults.”
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