Wide Open Pets: Companion Robot Pets Bring Joy and Company to Seniors

Wide Open Pets: Companion Robot Pets Bring Joy and Company to Seniors

It’s Amazon Prime Day and this product which we love has a rating of almost five stars. There are over 1,100 reviews!

Aging seniors that cannot care for a companion animal will love this cat companion as it’s almost a real pet. It’s much more than a plush toy!

Pets can provide their owners with unconditional love and companionship, which is especially important for individuals who live alone.

HomeCare Magazine: Robotic Pets Shown to Have Positive Impact on Patients and Their Families

HomeCare Magazine: Robotic Pets Shown to Have Positive Impact on Patients and Their Families

Pilot study finds Joy for All robotic companion pets improve interactions, behaviors and quality of life in hospice dementia patients.

It has been widely reported that animal-assisted therapy can help individuals cope with stress, reduce depression, prevent loneliness and improve socialization. However, for home health or hospice patient, a pet can also be burdensome. The added responsibility of caring for a pet is often too much for the patient and their family.

Pittsburgh City Paper: One in five Americans lives with a disability, Access+Ability features the tools they use to navigate the world

Pittsburgh City Paper: One in five Americans lives with a disability, Access+Ability features the tools they use to navigate the world

It’s important to remember when talking about disability, that the term is much broader than we normally think. It’s such a broad umbrella that encompasses things you can be born with, like autism or blindness, but also a broken leg or Alzheimer’s. In 2016, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that one in five Americans lives with a disability. Technology designed for people with disabilities, therefore, is not a niche field, but one that can and will benefit everybody.

New York Post: Lonely seniors turn to robot dogs for companionship

New York Post: Lonely seniors turn to robot dogs for companionship

When her aunt passed away last November, Carrolyn Minggia, 64, felt isolated. The Brooklyn Heights resident had moved from Philadelphia to NYC four years prior to care for her aging relative, who suffered from cancer and dementia. After her death, Minggia, who never married and has no children, suddenly found herself alone.

“When I moved here, there were aides, and when she passed, everybody left again,” she says.

Then, in April, Minggia got a pet — sort of.