Combining work and care can be very challenging. If not adequately supported, carers’ employment, well-being and relationships may be at risk. Technologies can be potential solutions. We carried out a scoping review to find out what is already known about technologies used by working carers. The search included academic and grey literature published between January 2000 and June 2020. Sixteen relevant publications were analysed and discussed in the context of the broader discourse on work-care reconciliation. Technologies discussed can be classified as: (a) web-based technologies; (b) technologies for direct communication; (c) monitoring technologies; and (d) task-sharing tools. Technologies can help to make work-care reconciliation more ma...
The need for care will increase in the coming years. Most people with a disability or old age receiv...
Current social care systems face challenges to their sustainability due in part to population ageing...
Background: There are assumptions that innovative ICT solutions in healthcare can improve the effici...
Combining work and care can be very challenging. If not adequately supported, carers' employment, we...
Despite a growing awareness of the importance of support for carers who combine paid work with care ...
Family carers, central to sustainable care, are mostly of working age and employed full-time. Their ...
The number of people who combine work and unpaid care is increasing rapidly as more people need care...
Background: There are approximately 6.5 million informal (unpaid) caregivers in the United Kingdom. ...
Background: Information and communication technology (ICT)–based solutions have the potential to sup...
Government policy in Sweden, as in other developed countries, pays increasing attention as to how be...
Care staff, those who attend to the day-to-day needs of people in residential facilities, represent ...
The rapid development and adoption of technological care equipment for remote monitoring, self-diagn...
In the United Kingdom and further afield, policy discourse has focused on the efficiencies technolog...
Abstract Background People living with all stages of dementia should have the opportunity to partici...
Ageing populations, coupled with increasing retirement ages and lower ratios of workers to retirees,...
The need for care will increase in the coming years. Most people with a disability or old age receiv...
Current social care systems face challenges to their sustainability due in part to population ageing...
Background: There are assumptions that innovative ICT solutions in healthcare can improve the effici...
Combining work and care can be very challenging. If not adequately supported, carers' employment, we...
Despite a growing awareness of the importance of support for carers who combine paid work with care ...
Family carers, central to sustainable care, are mostly of working age and employed full-time. Their ...
The number of people who combine work and unpaid care is increasing rapidly as more people need care...
Background: There are approximately 6.5 million informal (unpaid) caregivers in the United Kingdom. ...
Background: Information and communication technology (ICT)–based solutions have the potential to sup...
Government policy in Sweden, as in other developed countries, pays increasing attention as to how be...
Care staff, those who attend to the day-to-day needs of people in residential facilities, represent ...
The rapid development and adoption of technological care equipment for remote monitoring, self-diagn...
In the United Kingdom and further afield, policy discourse has focused on the efficiencies technolog...
Abstract Background People living with all stages of dementia should have the opportunity to partici...
Ageing populations, coupled with increasing retirement ages and lower ratios of workers to retirees,...
The need for care will increase in the coming years. Most people with a disability or old age receiv...
Current social care systems face challenges to their sustainability due in part to population ageing...
Background: There are assumptions that innovative ICT solutions in healthcare can improve the effici...