(NewsUSA) - You know we're all going a tad stir-crazy when a parody of the title song from Broadway's "Oklahoma!" ("Oh, Corona!") gets almost 1.7 million views on YouTube. But it's far worse for seniors: Not only can't even their kids and grandkids visit them, but there's the extra stress that comes with the nagging suspicion that they'll be advised to remain on lockdown long after younger people begin trickling back to work.
Whenever that is.
In fact, the AARP Foundation has even come up with this dire comparison: Prolonged social isolation, for those aged 50 and older, "is the health equivalent of smoking 15 cigarettes a day." Fortuitously, some of the niftiest technology offers solutions both to keep us connected and protect against some of the miscreants taking advantage of the situation.
* Health Checks. If you are worried that all the anxiety is harming your loved ones' overall well-being, the machine-learning algorithms that analyze activity data as part of Alarm.com's Wellness solution can provide you with the very details you've suddenly found yourself obsessing about.
Did they open their medicine cabinet when they should to take their prescription? Have their sleeping, eating, and (yes) bathroom patterns changed? Are they up and about during the day?
All that and more is done by connecting their home to yours via smart-home technology, with real-time smartphone alerts to let you know if something's amiss. "You don't even know it's there, but it's here to protect you and let someone know if something does go wrong," said Margarete Pullen of Dallas, Texas, whose son had the system installed by an authorized service provider for her and her husband along with a Wellcam video camera with two-way voice capability.
* Movie meet-ups. Most of us are just trying to find novel ways to cope with a situation that Nicholas Christakis, a social scientist and physician at Yale University, told Science magazine "calls on us to suppress our profoundly human and evolutionary hard-wired impulses for connection."
Google's new Netflix Party extension lets friends and family watch - and video chat their way through - a movie together on their computers. You'll need a NetFlix subscription, but then you're free to debate whether all the hype about Martin Scorsese's "The Irishman," say, was justified. Plus, unlike in real theatres, not many people (if any) are physically there to complain if you're making too much noise eating popcorn.
* Apps! Apps! Apps! No NetFlix subscription? With apps like FaceTime, Skype, Houseparty and Zoom comes more proof that social distancing needn't mean social disconnecting. Mass virtual dinner parties. Mass virtual "happy hours." Mass virtual gym classes. They've all become quite the rage, with one Vermont couple in their eighties even touchingly using Apple's FaceTime to see and talk to each other after the husband had to be put in a nursing home that bars visitors during the pandemic.
And, oh, you say you want to be a hero in your neighborhood? Use an app like Instagram to share a video of someone that Alarm.com's doorbell cameras caught swiping one of the many, many packages you've been having delivered.
Whenever that is.
In fact, the AARP Foundation has even come up with this dire comparison: Prolonged social isolation, for those aged 50 and older, "is the health equivalent of smoking 15 cigarettes a day." Fortuitously, some of the niftiest technology offers solutions both to keep us connected and protect against some of the miscreants taking advantage of the situation.
* Health Checks. If you are worried that all the anxiety is harming your loved ones' overall well-being, the machine-learning algorithms that analyze activity data as part of Alarm.com's Wellness solution can provide you with the very details you've suddenly found yourself obsessing about.
Did they open their medicine cabinet when they should to take their prescription? Have their sleeping, eating, and (yes) bathroom patterns changed? Are they up and about during the day?
All that and more is done by connecting their home to yours via smart-home technology, with real-time smartphone alerts to let you know if something's amiss. "You don't even know it's there, but it's here to protect you and let someone know if something does go wrong," said Margarete Pullen of Dallas, Texas, whose son had the system installed by an authorized service provider for her and her husband along with a Wellcam video camera with two-way voice capability.
* Movie meet-ups. Most of us are just trying to find novel ways to cope with a situation that Nicholas Christakis, a social scientist and physician at Yale University, told Science magazine "calls on us to suppress our profoundly human and evolutionary hard-wired impulses for connection."
Google's new Netflix Party extension lets friends and family watch - and video chat their way through - a movie together on their computers. You'll need a NetFlix subscription, but then you're free to debate whether all the hype about Martin Scorsese's "The Irishman," say, was justified. Plus, unlike in real theatres, not many people (if any) are physically there to complain if you're making too much noise eating popcorn.
* Apps! Apps! Apps! No NetFlix subscription? With apps like FaceTime, Skype, Houseparty and Zoom comes more proof that social distancing needn't mean social disconnecting. Mass virtual dinner parties. Mass virtual "happy hours." Mass virtual gym classes. They've all become quite the rage, with one Vermont couple in their eighties even touchingly using Apple's FaceTime to see and talk to each other after the husband had to be put in a nursing home that bars visitors during the pandemic.
And, oh, you say you want to be a hero in your neighborhood? Use an app like Instagram to share a video of someone that Alarm.com's doorbell cameras caught swiping one of the many, many packages you've been having delivered.
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