第四次技术与老龄化浪潮:确保公平和包容的政策创新

J. Coughlin
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引用次数: 4

摘要

20年前,被称为婴儿潮一代的美国一代进入了许多人认为的老年期。出生于1946年至1964年,到2000年,婴儿潮一代中年龄最大的已经50多岁了。正如在他们作为孩子、员工、父母和消费者的早期生活阶段一样,公众关注的焦点是预测这一群体的下一步行动。有了压倒性的数字、购买力和态度,他们在老年时想要什么、需要什么和需求什么?许多观察家预测,美国看似永远年轻的一代的老龄化将导致隐喻性的社会经济风暴、海啸和地震。尽管有无数悲观的预测,乐观的论调也出现了。技术进步是这一代人经历和成长的标志。从家用电器、彩电、太空计划、移动音乐、个人电脑和电信的创新,到他们步入中年后期的互联网繁荣,技术一直是他们生活的支柱:为什么不在老年呢?在过去的20年里,在开发技术以改善老年人和照顾他们的人的生活方面取得了重大进展。提高老年人生活质量的技术的发展和应用已呈波浪式发展,每一次都有不同的重点。没有浪潮完全消退,但优先事项以及政府、企业和研究界的角色仍在继续演变。第1波:界面老化
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The Fourth Wave of Technology and Aging: Policy Innovation to Ensure Equity and Inclusion
The American generation known as the Baby Boomers entered what many consider older adulthood 2 decades ago. Born between 1946 and 1964, by the year 2000 the oldest of the Boomers were well into their 50s. Just as in their earlier life stages as children, employees, parents, and consumers, there was a public focus on anticipating this cohort’s next move. With overwhelming numbers, buying power, and attitude, what would they want, need, and demand in older age? Many observers forecasted that the aging of America’s seemingly forever young generation would result in metaphorical socioeconomic storms, tsunamis, and quakes. Despite these countless dour forecasts, optimistic tones also emerged. Technological advance had been the hallmark of this generation’s experience and coming of age. From innovations in household appliances, color television, the space program, music on the go, personal computing, and telecommunications to the Internet boom that was happening just as they entered their later stages of midlife, technology had always been a mainstay of their lives: why not in older age? Over the last 20 years, there has been significant progress in developing technology to improve the lives of older people and those who care for them. The development and application of technology to improve the quality of life of older adults has evolved in waves, each with a different emphasis. No wave totally recedes, but priorities, as well as the roles of government, business, and the research community, continue to evolve. Wave 1: Aging as Interface
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