The future of senior living resident engagement is about empowering everyone to engage any resident – no matter their preferences or physical and cognitive abilities.
Today, the Activity Director job description starts like this:
“The Activity Director plans, implements, and evaluates activities for residents. Designs programs to encourage socialization, provide entertainment, relaxation, and fulfillment, and improve daily living skills to ensure the highest level of wellbeing for all residents.”
Most activity and life enrichment professionals do not have the tools and resources they need to achieve the objectives of the job outlined above. They often face staffing ratios of 1:90 with little budget, few tools or supportive technologies, and often no clear line of communication with their Executive Director or other department heads. This disconnect between what is promised to the resident and the expectations set for the activities department and what is actually implemented leads to staff burnout, poor resident satisfaction and quality of life, and lower occupancy.
With this in mind, it isn’t hard to see why artificial intelligence could become a great accelerator in activities and life enrichment by enabling staff augmentation, streamlining decision-making, and creating technology enhancement improvements that allow staff to use the social prescription model.
There are four pillars of activity and life enrichment programming that will be positively disrupted by artificial intelligence in the following ways:
Level One: Engagement for one resident
Jeff was born in 1951, and he likes hockey and French music. Artificial intelligence can produce unlimited programs for meaningfully engaging Jeff that include text, images, songs, and videos.
These programs can then be deployed by any team member.
Level two: Engagement for the community
Using data from all of the residents in the community, Artificial intelligence can improve programming by understanding the social clusters of residents (those who are all French, or those who are piano lovers…) and then suggest programs to engage these groups. It can also suggest programs that take into account physical/cognitive abilities such as residents who are hard of hearing, have different cognitive abilities, or even those with changing preferences.
Originally appeared on: https://www.mcknights.com/marketplace/marketplace-experts/artificial-intelligence-and-resident-engagement/