Sensi.AI, a trailblazer in care intelligence, has officially announced the results from its latest Care Intelligence study; where the company would go on to reveal major gaps around senior care during nights and weekends in particular. Named as Sensi’s Care Intelligence Digest, the study basically brings forth groundbreaking discoveries and correlations by analyzing hundreds of millions of anonymized data points from older adults receiving home care services. More on the stated study will reveal how, using Sensi’s 24/7 audio AI technology, it pursues the goal of elevating care standards through predictive analytics. Not just that, the whole exercise even hopes to educate the current care ecosystem on various lesser-known realities of the aging population. Having referred to the initial bits and bobs, we now must talk about the published results on a slightly deeper level. For starters, we must acknowledge the fact that well over 50 percent of falls occur at night and on weekends, increasing health risks during off-hours. Next up, it digs into those 56 percent of falls which happen in the bathroom or bedroom. These falls, on their part, highlight the need for targeted safety measures across the given areas. Then, there is a discovery claiming how cognitive decline is 30 percent more concentrated at night, whereas mood changes are 22 percent more concentrated at night relative to other care events. Both the factors, however, have become known for significantly impacting overall well-being.
“Let us not fool ourselves about the caregiver shortage—it is real and will continue to grow,” said Romi Gubes, Co-Founder and CEO of Sensi.AI. “Sensi’s Care Intelligence Digest uncovers crucial information for care agencies and senior families. How are we going to know if something happens to our aging parents with no caregivers to be there watching over them 24/7? We need a better way to ensure our loved ones can safely age in place, and Sensi’s audio-based AI Platform plays a pivotal role in solving this problem.”
Moving on, the study further takes the veil of those 61 seniors who are far more likely to fall when displaying care resistance, as compared to those in homes where positive care is detected. Hold on, as we still haven’t touched upon a detail which says that two out of every five falls are prevented when there is a strong match between client and caregiver, characterized by appreciation, compliments, or praise. Rounding up highlights would be a faction of an estimated 48 percent seniors who experience comparatively fewer medication errors occur when caregivers and clients communicate well and trust each other.
Making Sensi’s Care Intelligence Digest even more important is how it happens to be based on the company’s proprietary and unique dataset, the largest in the home care industry. You see, the said dataset is trained with over 1,000 years of audio data. As a result, it is not just unbiased in its responses but also well-equipped when it comes to delivering more than 100 unique care insights.
Founded in 2019, Sensi.AI’s rise up the ranks stems from reaching home care agencies with the first 24/7 Virtual Care Agent who provides a 360-degree understanding of a senior’s physical, emotional, and cognitive needs. In essence, the agent banks upon sophisticated audio-analytics to help home care agencies detect, predict, and prevent unwanted events from occurring. This involves reducing hospitalizations, increasing care hours, identifying caregiver training needs, boosting caregiver and client satisfaction, as well as extending the lifetime value of their customers.
“Sensi allows us to take care of more clients—especially those needing round-the-clock care. Without Sensi, providing 24/7 coverage for a client would require five to seven people, which is very hard to staff. We can now identify and prioritize when a senior truly needs a human caregiver, and for the rest, we supplement with Sensi as a 24/7 safety net. If the home care industry continues to rely solely on warm bodies, it will fail due to the shortage,” said Casey Rausin, Chief Operating Officer of Care Around the Block