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Pilot Program Helps Aging Patients Retain Independence Through House Calls

How can the health-care industry create incentives and provide technology to get more Americans to live healthier lifestyles? That was the key question at the Connected Health Summit this week in San Diego, organized by Dallas-based industry research firm Parks Associates. Getting consumers more engaged in their health is considered a key strategy to cutting health-care costs, according to Park Associates. Its research found that only 23 percent of U.S. consumers are actively engaged in living a healthy lifestyle. (Freeman, 9/2)

From the article "California Healthcare Daily Edition" by www.californiahealthline.org

Previously In The News

Dealers: Integrating Customers’ Smart Home Devices Is Difficult

New research from Parks Associates finds U.S. security dealers are “facing renewed challenges integrating customers’ existing smart home devices into professionally installed security systems.” Ado...

Soaring Memory Prices Dampen Demand for Budget Smartphones

Rising DRAM costs are one of several factors increasing the cost of developing next-generation connected devices, observed Elizabeth Parks, president and CMO of Parks Associates, a Dallas-based market...

Twenty Years From Now, You Won’t Just Watch Sports—You’ll Enter Them

“Sports broadcasting is going to look very different in the future,” says Michael Goodman, director of entertainment research at Parks Associates, a market-research and consulting firm. “The core prod...

State of the Market: Security’s ‘Sixth Sense’ Drives Intrusion & Smart Home

Parks Associates forecasts steady growth for the U.S. smart home device market, which will reach $15 billion in sales revenue by 2029. According to a whitepaper released by Parks Associates and Viv...