One in four people over 65 will experience a fall, and for most of them, the technology designed to help is a device that hasn't meaningfully changed since the 1980s. Chia-Lin Simmons, CEO of LogicMark, joined Craig Smith to make the case that this gap is both unnecessary and solvable, and that AI is finally making it possible to shift personal safety from reactive to predictive. Her company's Freedom Alert Max doesn't just detect falls after they happen, it builds a personalized digital twin of each user, tracking steps, sleep patterns, and medication adherence over time to identify the subtle signs of health decline that even daily caregivers often miss.
The conversation is one of the most grounded and human discussions of applied AI you'll hear, covering why Apple Watch fall detection was engineered for crash detection, not elderly falls; why AI can flag a problem but a human needs to hear the breathing on the other end of the line; and why the 700,000 caregiver shortage in America makes technology like this not a luxury but a scaling mechanism. For anyone navigating aging parents, their own future, or the sandwich generation pressures in between, this episode is both practically useful and genuinely moving.
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