During my career as a rehabilitation physician, I learned to look beyond the patient. Behind every person losing autonomy, there is a family: worried children, a tired spouse, grandchildren asking questions. They are the ones carrying daily anxiety. They are the ones who wonder each night: “Is Mom safe? Is Dad taking his medication properly?”
I saw too often how this worry consumed entire families. And I realized that supporting someone who is dependent is not just about helping them — it is also about restoring trust to their loved ones.
That is exactly what I do today as an autonomy coordinator with Jamacare. Concretely, this means:
Deploying care assistants who know the person and how to support them daily,
Installing reliable teleassistance, which reassures both the person and their family,
Handling the administrative burden, often heavier than people realize.
Yes, Kinexa is developing technologies that will take us even further tomorrow. But I am not waiting for tomorrow: I already build concrete solutions today. Because when a family regains trust, they breathe easier — and the patient lives better.
