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Background The growing pressure faced by adult social care in England has fuelled interest in technology-enabled care (TEC). This includes the use of sensor-based technology to monitor activity patterns for ‘proactive’ interventions and care. However, evidence on its effectiveness and use is limited to feasibility pilots, as opposed to business-as-usual. Working with three local authorities using home sensors, we sought to define good practices and draw transferable lessons on implementing and embedding this technology in routine care practice. Methods Across all sites, we interviewed 51 staff and system stakeholders, 19 service users, and family/informal caregivers. We also used secondary data to determine the feasibility of a full economic study. The analysis was guided by the NASSS (non-adoption, abandonment, and challenges to scale-up, spread and sustainability) framework to explore factors influencing implementation and sustained adoption of the technology in use. Results Home sensors were used across multiple care contexts (assessment, reablement, and long-term care monitoring). Perceived value and impact included an increase in service user independence and safety, family/informal caregiver reassurance, identifying healthcare needs, providing more holistic and objective assessments, and supporting dialogue regarding care needs. However, evidence of the impact across these areas was limited, and we were unable to obtain the data required to undertake an economic analysis. Key issues to consider for sustained adoption include the materiality and dependability of the technology, compatibility with service users and their care networks, workforce knowledge and confidence, inter-organizational routines and coordination work, and strategic alignment. Conclusion Our findings indicate the need to acknowledge the labor-intensive process of embedding and adapting the use of home sensors for proactive care. Decision makers need to focus on how to support and resource incremental and system wide-changes, with particular attention paid to ensuring technology dependability, ‘wrap around’ support, workforce knowledge and skills, co-adaptation of inter-organization routines, cross-stakeholder collaboration, and evaluation capabilities.

Original publication

DOI

10.3310/nihropenres.14011.1

Type

Journal article

Journal

NIHR Open Research

Publisher

National Institute for Health and Care Research

Publication Date

22/08/2025

Volume

5

Pages

71 - 71