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Healthcare consumers across the globe want smart homes and digital tools to support them in the home as they age.
Nearly 75% of global respondents to the EY Global Consumer Health Survey 2025 said they would likely take advantage of a “smart home” equipped with sensors and devices to monitor and alert their healthcare team and family to potential emergencies.
The healthcare system that we have for people as they age is not the one they want. Nearly 60% of global respondents rate the system of care as they age as fair or poor — worse than they rate the overall healthcare system (41%) and the mental healthcare system (49%).
Many still think of institutional, impersonal settings when they think of aged care, and “nobody wants to go there,” said one Australian aged care provider.
We are pouring untold resources into an unsustainable care delivery model that is likely to clash with segments of consumers who view aging more in terms of living well, with a longer “healthspan” empowered by technology. They use digital tools to track steps, count protein grams, monitor for heart irregularities, measure water intake and analyze their sleep.
Future users of aged care are not convinced that the care delivery system will be able to meet their needs. Whereas 32% of those respondents who are currently using aged care say it is extremely or very difficult to navigate, 45% who are not yet needing care say it is extremely or very difficult to navigate.
The survey results and interviews with health executives across the globe suggest that consumers often find a disjointed, confused web of services, struggling to access information and support when it is needed. Executives and experts point to the need for a more integrated ecosystem, actionable data insights, seamless navigation, better caregiver support and a realignment of funds to focus on prevention.
Johnny Advocaat, Director of Quality, Innovation and Digitalization for the municipal nursing home agency in Oslo, Norway, spoke plainly of the effects of sticking with the status quo. “If we don’t change course, projections suggest that by 2050, Oslo will need to double its nursing home capacity — from today’s 36 nursing homes to more than 70,” he said, noting that it usually takes a decade from the decision to build a new nursing home until it opens. “But capacity alone won’t solve the challenge — we need to reorient the system toward prevention, independence and quality of life, so that more people can thrive longer before they ever need a nursing home.”
How we view success in aged care needs to shift as well. “We need to optimize for quality of life — for residents and their families — not just survival,” he said. “A nursing home should not be measured only by how many years we can add, but by whether those years are dignified, connected and meaningful for both the person living there and the people who love them.”
What do consumers say they want?
For those who may need more than just monitoring, 70% of global respondents would be moderately to extremely likely to consider hospital at home programs for healthcare. Their top priorities in hospital at home programs are receiving basic support for daily living activities, followed by medication assistance, nursing care support and installation of safety equipment in the home.
Further evidence of consumer interest in digital tools can be seen in EY survey results:
- 67% of respondents were moderately to extremely likely to use digital technologies that collect health data such as blood pressure to send to their healthcare team.
- 64% were open to digitally enabled healthcare that provides both virtual and in-person options.
- 54% were moderately to extremely likely to use genetic tests that show whether they are predisposed to certain health conditions as they age.
- 56% said they were open to voice-enabled digital assistants that offer reminders to take medicine, drink water, exercise and help make appointments.
- 49% indicated openness to artificial intelligence (AI) technologies that analyze their health data to identify health risks as they age as well as suitable treatments.
Future generations of seniors want to see these technologies integrated into their care even more. Those respondents who are now aged 50 to 59 years old have significantly higher levels of interest in hospital at home, wearables, virtual care, voice-enabled assistants and AI than those in older age groups.
“We live in a society where if I want a Chicago deep dish pizza, in three taps it's coming, and I can see, more importantly, where it's at,” said Feisal Keshavjee, Senior Vice President of Health Partnerships and Transformation for CBI Health, a community health provider that delivers more than 10 million home care visits per year across Canada. Better navigation, enabled by technology that keeps consumers and their families connected in real time, is critical to improve care for people as they age. “If there is a referral for care, I want to be able to see where my referral is sitting. What's the wait list? How long before I can get there? These are the kinds of things people are going to want as they age, because they're used to that.”
Other executives cited the challenges that exist because of how senior care, assisted living and aged care are perceived. They agreed expectations have to be reset that care happens in the community, rather than in the type of institutional setting that generates fear in many.
Jonathan O’Keeffe, an advanced nurse practitioner and nurse prescriber in gerontology in Ireland and past Hon. Vice President of the Irish Gerontological Society, called for more sheltered housing, which is designed to balance both individual living for older people with a communal safety net. “They should be not too far removed from where they live to keep a sense of community, have somewhere to get their dinner, being able to share life with others,” he said. Mr. O’Keeffe also called for continued focus on frailty education programs that will keep people mobile, socially connected and cognitively stimulated, noting that “it is also equally important that we continue to invest in high quality specialist older person’s care for both rehabilitative settings as well as our long-term care and nursing home settings. All parts of the national health jigsaw must move in tandem with each other.”
Experts lamented situations where older people need help but are unable to access community support in real time, so they go to the high-cost emergency department, which can be more traumatic.