Technology for Aging Parents: The Tools That Actually Help (And the Ones That Don’t)
You’ve spent three hours researching medical alert systems, and every single one claims to be “#1 rated.” Your mother fell last Tuesday and nobody knew for forty-five minutes. Your father swears he is taking his medications but the pill count says otherwise. You want a solution that actually works — not a product designed to exploit your fear.
This is an honest assessment of what caregiving technology can and can’t do, based on peer-reviewed evidence and real-world outcomes — not affiliate commissions.
The Promise vs. the Reality
The assistive technology market for older adults is projected to reach $30 billion by 2027 (Grand View Research, 2023). That’s a lot of money chasing a population that’s often technology-averse, cognitively vulnerable, and being purchased for by stressed adult children who will buy almost anything that promises peace of mind.
Not all of it’s snake oil. Some of these tools genuinely save lives. But the marketing makes it nearly impossible to separate what works from what simply sells well. A 2021 systematic review in The Gerontologist evaluated 47 assistive technology interventions for community-dwelling older adults and found that the strongest evidence existed for a narrow set of categories — while many widely marketed products had minimal or no outcome data (Peek et al., 2021).
Here’s what the evidence actually says.
Category 1: Medical Alert Systems (Personal Emergency Response Systems)
The verdict: Effective — with caveats.
Medical alert systems — the “I’ve fallen and I can’t get up” devices — are the most studied category of assistive technology for older adults. A 2019 meta-analysis in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society found that PERS use was associated with reduced emergency department visits, shorter time-to-response after falls, and increased confidence among both users and caregivers (De San Miguel et al., 2019).
What actually matters when choosing one:
Products with strong track records: Medical Guardian, Bay Alarm Medical, and the Lively Mobile Plus (now part of GreatCall/Lively) consistently perform well in independent testing. Apple Watch’s fall detection feature is increasingly viable for tech-comfortable seniors, with a 2023 study in Heart Rhythm validating its accelerometer accuracy for hard falls, though it requires the watch to be worn and charged — a bigger behavioral barrier than most families anticipate.
What to skip: Any system that requires a multi-year contract or charges cancellation fees. Your parent’s needs will change. Lock-in contracts exploit that uncertainty.
Category 2: Smart Pill Dispensers and Medication Management
The verdict: Helpful for the right person. Not a replacement for oversight.
Medication nonadherence among older adults is a massive problem. A 2020 review in Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy found that approximately 50% of older adults with chronic conditions don’t take medications as prescribed, contributing to an estimated 125,000 preventable deaths per year in the U.S. (Kleinsinger, 2020).
Smart pill dispensers — devices like the Hero Health dispenser, MedMinder, and PillPack (now Amazon Pharmacy) — aim to solve this through automated dispensing, alerts, and caregiver notifications.
What the evidence shows:
A 2021 randomized controlled trial published in BMC Geriatrics found that electronic pill dispensers with automated reminders improved medication adherence by 16-20% over standard pill organizers in a sample of adults aged 65+ with polypharmacy (Checchi et al., 2021). The effect was strongest for people who wanted to take their medications but genuinely forgot — not for those who were intentionally nonadherent due to side effects or cost.
This distinction matters enormously. If your father skips his statin because it makes his muscles ache, a fancier pill box won’t fix that. That’s a conversation with his doctor.
What actually matters when choosing one:
What to skip: Any app-only solution for a parent with cognitive decline. If your mother can’t reliably use a smartphone, a smartphone-based medication reminder isn’t a solution — it’s a gift for yourself.
Category 3: Remote Monitoring and Smart Home Sensors
The verdict: Most promising category. Least mature.
Passive monitoring systems — motion sensors, door sensors, smart plugs that track appliance use, sleep monitors — create a pattern of daily life that alerts caregivers when something deviates. Your parent didn’t open the refrigerator today. The bathroom motion sensor hasn’t triggered since last night. The stove was left on for four hours.
A 2022 longitudinal study in The Journals of Gerontology followed 200 older adults using passive in-home sensors over 24 months and found that activity pattern changes detected by sensors preceded clinical decline (measured by standardized assessments) by an average of 3-4 weeks (Kaye et al., 2022). That’s a meaningful early warning window.
What actually matters:
What to skip: Full video monitoring in private spaces. A motion sensor tells you your parent got up and went to the bathroom. A camera in the hallway tells you the same thing while stripping their dignity. Use cameras only at entry points and shared spaces, and only with explicit consent.
Category 4: Video Communication and Social Connection
The verdict: Effective, but only if the interface is right.
Social isolation is a clinical-grade health risk for older adults. A 2023 meta-analysis in The Lancet Public Health found that social isolation was associated with a 26% increased risk of all-cause mortality, comparable to smoking 15 cigarettes per day (Wang et al., 2023).
Video calling can mitigate this — but the technology barrier is real. Standard tablets and smartphones have too many interface elements for someone with mild cognitive impairment or low technology literacy.
What actually works:
What to skip: Any device that requires regular software updates, password entry, or account management by the end user. If your parent has to remember a password, the system will fail within two weeks.
Category 5: GPS Trackers and Wandering Prevention
The verdict: Essential for dementia. Ethically complex.
For families managing dementia with wandering risk, GPS tracking isn’t optional — it’s a safety necessity. Approximately 60% of people with dementia will wander at least once, and if not found within 24 hours, up to 50% will suffer serious injury or death (Alzheimer’s Association, 2023).
What works:
What to skip: Smartphone-based tracking (Find My iPhone, Life360) for anyone with moderate or advanced dementia. If they can lose the phone, the tracking is useless precisely when you need it most.
The Honest Bottom Line
No technology replaces human caregiving. What the best tools do is reduce the surveillance burden — the constant low-grade anxiety of not knowing whether your parent is safe right now. They convert continuous worry into exception-based alerts, which preserves your cognitive bandwidth for the caregiving tasks that actually require a human being: the medical advocacy, the emotional support, the impossible conversations about what comes next.
Before you buy anything, ask three questions:
1. Will my parent actually use this? The most sophisticated device is worthless in a drawer. Involve your parent in the selection. Let them handle it. If the interface frustrates them in the store, it will frustrate them at home.
2. What specific problem am I solving? “I want peace of mind” isn’t specific enough. “I need to know if my mother falls when I am not there” leads you to a PERS. “I need to know if my father is taking his evening medications” leads you to a smart dispenser with caregiver alerts. Different problems, different tools.
3. Am I buying this for them or for me? There’s no wrong answer. A monitoring system that primarily reduces your anxiety is still a valid purchase. But being honest about who benefits prevents resentment when the technology does not transform your parent’s behavior — because it was never going to.
The technology that helps most is the technology that gets used. Start simple. Add complexity only when a specific need demands it. And remember that your parent managed for decades without any of this. The goal isn’t to surveil their life. It’s to support it.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical or professional advice. Product recommendations are based on publicly available evidence and independent reviews as of the publication date. Features, pricing, and availability may change. Always involve your parent and their healthcare providers in decisions about assistive technology.