Posts Tagged integrative system design
[THESIS] Design of Eco-Smart Homes For Elderly Independent Living – Full Text PDF
Posted by Kostas Pantremenos in Caregivers on February 14, 2015
ABSTRACT
Context. Living conditions for elderly people, including household services and healthcare provision in
the home, have become a hot topic worldwide with the aging of the population and the rising societal
costs for healthcare. The rapid increase of elderly populations putting a heavy strain on social welfare,
healthcare providers, hospitals, nursing homes and service homes for elderly as well as on elderly
people themselves and their caretakers, next of kin and social networks. Design of Eco-Smart Homes
for the elderly is a practical and efficient approach that aims to address and deal with this situation.
Intelligent housing offers support for independent living for elderly through the application and
integration of advanced technologies in the home. The aim is to provide a full range of services to meet
diverse and individual needs. Sustainability issues are addressed in design, development and building as
well as in service provision.
Objectives. In this study we investigate the conceptual modelling of the eco-smart home for elderly
independent living in relation to the perceived needs and requests of the elderly population. Rather than
focusing on the various technologies involved, however, we have basically ‘blackboxed’ the technical
systems themselves and how they interact with each other. Our main focus is on exploring the needs of
the elderly as a base for designing the different levels of the care service system in the eco-smart home.
From these two points – integrated technological solutions for eco-smart housing, presented as a
meta-system of blackboxed systems, and smart, adaptable care service levels for meeting the varying
needs of the elderly – we aim to provide ideas and suggestions that can not only be of use for the
Intelligent House Builder but also take into account the needs of users and the question of costs, which
are important aspects of sustainable solutions.
Methods. A literature review has been carried out, in which we have mainly focused on articles about
technologies for smart homes. We have also interviewed three experienced employees in the welfare
sector who work with the implementation of ICT solutions in healthcare and homecare. With their help
and guidance, we gained a better understanding about the practical needs of the elderly, and the present
situation in Swedish healthcare and homecare. Additionally, we have conducted interviews and a survey
among elderly people about their opinions and requirements. After this, we have interviewed and
discussed our conceptual model with a project leader in the area of innovations in applied health
technology who has a number of years of experience of use-centered design of health technology for
home care and who gave us valuable feedback on our conceptual model. Finally, we did evaluation
workshops with questionnaires in Karlshamn and Ronneby.
Results. We have designed an exemplar of an eco-smart home which includes integrated technologies
to support and provide care service for the elderly. We have developed a comprehensive
system-of-systems model and a care service-level model which we have mapped on to the
system-of-systems model. The resulting conceptual model, which is a sketchy working construct
intended to support integrative thinking around eco-smart homes for independent living, includes 5
main technology systems and 3 levels of customer service. The conceptual model was used in our
interviews and survey to get feedback from elderly people as well as experts about the concept of
service levels and integrated technologies in eco-smart homes.
Conclusions. We conclude that the conceptual model we developed was supportive in our own work
with trying to understand and address the complexity of designing an eco-smart home for independent
living for the elderly, and that it also provided support for communication with elderly people about
their care needs, requirements and expectations about technology-enhanced supportive living
environments. Our interviews and survey among elderly, though limited in scope, indicate that elderly
people living in Sweden are inclined to be interested in eco-smart home solutions and integrated design
of technologies that can satisfy the primary needs of the elderly.
The contribution of our thesis is to provide a comprehensive exemplar of a comfortable eco-smart
environment for elderly independent living which combines integrated technologies with choices of
desired level of service, thus bringing complex combinations of a multitude of different technological
systems required for eco-smart homes closer to the actual everyday needs of the future users. From a
Computer Science perspective, in the overlapping application domains of eco-smart homes and
technical support for healthcare and homecare service provision, our main contribution is to bring to the
foreground a focus on integrated services which are adaptable to different levels and combinations of
user needs in the context of eco-smart elderly independent living.

