Implementation of Assistive Technologies and Robotics in Long-Term Care Facilities: A Three-Stage Assessment Based on Acceptance, Ethics, and Emotions

Implementation of Assistive Technologies and Robotics in Long-Term Care Facilities: A Three-Stage Assessment Based on Acceptance, Ethics, and Emotions

Category:
User Experience

Net4Age Ontology Terms:
acceptance , caregiver , comfort , device , ethic , healthcare , medical science , technology , usability

Description:

Assistive technologies including assistive robots (AT/AR) appear to be a promising response to the increasing prevalence of older adults in need of care. An increasing number of long-term care facilities (LTCFs) try to implement AT/AR in order to create a stimulating environment for aging well and to reduce workload for professional care staff. The implementation of new technologies in an organization may lead to noticeable cultural changes in terms of social interactions and care practices associated with positive or negative emotions for the employees. This applies especially for LTCFs with high rates of vulnerable residents affected by increasing care needs and specific ethics in nursing and cultural rules within the setting. Thus, systematic consideration in leadership management of emotions and ethical aspects is essential for stakeholders involved in the implementation process. In this article, we explicitly focus on the emotions of the employees and leaders within LTCFs. We relate to direct consequences for the organizational well-being and culture, which is of course (indirectly) affecting patients and residents. While aspects of technology acceptance such as safety and usefulness are frequently discussed in academic literature, the topic of emotion-management and ethical questions during the organizational implementation process in LTCFs received little attention. Emotional culture entails affective values, ethical norms and perceptions of employees and further investigation is needed to address the importance of transformational leadership during implementation process. For this purpose, we developed a three-staged assessment tool for implementation of AT/AR in long-term care institutions. Acceptance (A), ethical acceptability (A) and emotional consequences (E) are considered as comprehensive assessment, in which emotional consequences comprise management aspects of transformational leadership (T), emotion-management (E) and organizational culture (O). Based on AAE and TEO, this paper presents an integrated framework illustrated with a illustrative example and aims to combine established approaches with ethical insights in order to unfold potentials of AT/AR in LTCSs.

Overview: 
We talk about the use of assistive technologies (including assistive robots) in elderly care, and in particular in long-term care facilities

Objectives: 
Illustrate the impact of assistive technologies in the care of the elderly (both on patients and caregivers) by looking at the ethical, emotional and acceptance implications of the medium

Initiatives: 
It investigates not only the actual effectiveness of the technology in use but also possible emotional-social implications that might result from its use
Shortcomings: 
-
Relevance: 
4
Relevance Description: 
It could be relevant because it proposes a method of ascertaining the actual usability of certain care technologies in long-stay settings
Quality: 
4
Opinion: 
AAE-model is initially a working hypothesis that deserves further development
Overlap: 
No
Overlap Detail: 
Sources: 
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.694297/full
Keywords: 
Assistive robotics - Long-term care - Emotion management - Ethics
Email: 
ef.pillitteri@outlook.com