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Heatwave Watch: Smart tech keeps Rome's elderly safe

Dina Gazzella is an 85-year old Roman widow who has no company in her home after losing her husband and cat.

She is not alone, thanks to the smart technology.

A team of social workers keeps tabs on her remotely through an electronic wristband that monitors heart rate and sleep patterns, as well as allowing her to call for assistance in an emergency.

The device is part a EUR400 million ($456 millions) scheme of support for the elderly that was introduced by Rome's municipal with EU post COVID funding last year, and currently covers around 700 people.

Local authorities hail the device as an important health prevention tool. This is especially true in the middle of a deadly heatwave that has been raging in Europe. Rome's temperatures have reached the upper 30s.

Piera Pomente, clinical psychologist, said that the bracelet was crucial for older people in hot weather, because their blood pressure falls, and their heart rate is lower than normal. They really suffer.

The black plastic bracelet is worn as a watch and has motion sensors to detect falls. It also tracks Gazzella’s movements inside and outside of her home in the eastern suburbs of the Italian capital.

Gazzella said, "If I'm feeling unwell, it is a lifesaver."

PEACE OF MIND

The octogenarian was a sprightly old lady as she pottered around her apartment, preparing coffee, showing photos of her grandchildren and talking about the visit to an World War Two bunker that a community group had made with her on the previous day.

She said that the bracelet brought her peace of mind.

They convinced me to get it because they said it was essential, because if anything happens, or if I fell, no one would pick me up. Instead, this one beeps and someone will come.

The psychologist Pomente runs a support desk at the local pharmacy where she and her colleagues process the applications for joining the bracelet scheme and monitor the subscribers' data on a computer.

Some people are concerned about privacy and have a reservation regarding the bracelet. Pomente stated that only 45 of the 70 people who originally?joined in at the pharmacy have remained, and she hopes to?win them back.

She said, "It is not as if we are spying on them with cameras inside their homes."

Her team is available from Monday through Friday, from 8:30 am to 7 pm, and on weekends and nights, notifications are sent to family members via an app.

Pomente has experienced two emergency situations in the last year. One man fell on the street, and the other slipped from his wheelchair. Both were solved by alerting family members who came to help.

On normal days, it is mainly about chitchat.

Social workers from the municipality call every day to check on people, whether they have taken their medicine, if the heat is too much, or if they just want a friendly listen if they're bored or lonely.

Pomente explained that the goal was to help people share their feelings, their day and their excessive heat.

(source: Reuters)