Meghan Phelan

Addison is an AI-powered virtual caregiver for a senior loved one designed to provide 24/7 care and safety support from home. Addison provides real-time health monitoring, continuous support for the at-risk, aging and ill, designed with tons of built-in tracking and monitoring features like GPS, fall detection, insulin tracking, and more. Addison helps patients better manage their health, improve the efficacy of caregivers, and improve their quality of life. Addison also helps to overcome social isolation and poor mood as a companion.

Meghan Phelan joins Suzanne to talk about the benefits of bringing Addison into the home of a senior loved one. Meghan says, “It’s a monitor, like an iPad. So you get the monitor and then you pick as many devices as you want to go along with it. It comes with two. So that can be for monitoring. It could be like insulin checks, it could be there’s other GPS trackers. So it’s all these little gadgets that come with it. But you personalize what you want. I think a lot of the most sought after are the fall monitoring. So they’ll plug in the sensors, set up reminders, and they’ll set up the vitals that you want to track to your doctor. You also get TeleHealth access to a doctor, literally called PocketMD. And you know how it goes on the weekends. So if you wake up and all of a sudden something’s not right, all you have to do is is reach out to somebody right there, right on the screen. Hey, Addison, can you call the doctor?”

Meghan adds, “We haven’t even talked about was the companionship side of it. We all have Chat GPT now on our phones, and I say that that’s my best friend, you know. And the same thing goes for Addison. She’s on there, and Addison can fetch, ‘Hey, I want to make a spaghetti recipe tonight. Can you put me together something?’ you know, or ‘Can we do some chair exercises?’ So the whole part of the physical help, yes, the monitoring is there, but also what comes with Addison is the companionship side.”

Call Meghan to set up a demo of the Electronic Caregiver, featuring Addison and Pocket M.D., at 786.759.1676.

Meghan Phelan also talks about making an aging in place plan, even if you never need to use it. Meghan says, “Everybody needs an age-in-place plan. Whether you activate that age-in-place plan, we don’t know, but at least you have it in place. One is, to get your physical space ready. Number two is A.I., and what are we doing with technology? And number three is the human part of it: Do you have your team place, a CPA, an attorney, living wills, and all that, home care teams. And do you know your market? You need to know your market. So when I talk aging in place plan, those are the three things that I focus on.”

Meghan and Suzanne go in depth at improving the safety of our home environment – “I look at bathroom, kitchen, hallways. Those are my first three… I usually recommend local safety experts that come in, and they’ll do free safety inspections, and then they’ll know where to get [whatever products are needed].” Then they tie it in with the addition of the Electronic Caregiver, an AI-powered virtual caregiver for a senior loved one designed to provide 24/7 care and safety support.

Next, Meghan talks about a TeleHealth service called Pocket M.D., as well as the expanded availability of support networks for seniors.

Meghan says, “We call it the Pocket M.D. And basically it’s like having a medical doctor in your back pocket, available to you 24/7 wherever you go, primary care in your back pocket. You’re not paying for a doctor visit, because it’s right there in your phone, all included in the Addison [AI] model of a subscription.” Not feeling well? Just say, “Hey, Addison, can you call my Pocket M.D.? And they’ll connect them with an M.D. on the other side. And from there, the M.D. will do the assessment and whatever is needed for follow-up care order… And in addition to that primary care aspect, there’s wellness checks with nurses.”

Regarding support groups, Meghan says, “COVID was devastating, but in so many ways it opened the door for seniors to get more access to help, because a lot of businesses like mine and the Alzheimer’s Association, we pivoted: how can we get to the client now? And that was virtually. So I do my support groups, and they do support groups through the Alzheimer’s Association every month, and we do it online, or we do it call-in. But I’m on Zoom and that’s how I’m running my support groups.”

Call Meghan to set up a demo of the Electronic Caregiver, featuring Addison and Pocket M.D., at 786.759.1676.

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