For years, we have been promised technological revolutions in aging care: assistive robots, artificial intelligence, connected sensors. I followed these developments with interest as a physician. But I reached a simple conclusion: technology without organization is useless.
A fall detector can send an alert. But if no one is there to understand, decide, and act, it remains pointless. A tablet can enable video calls. But if the care assistant has not been trained, if the family is not integrated, the device will sit in a drawer.
That is why I created Jamacare: to integrate teleassistance and digital tools into a clear system, led by care assistants and an autonomy coordinator. For us, technology is not an end in itself. It is an extension. A lever to make human support more effective, safer, and more reassuring.
I left the hospital to take on this role because I know the future will not be shaped by one miracle innovation, but by smart organization. And that organization must place humans at its center.
With Jamacare, we commit to an alliance: humans + technology + coordination. And I believe this alliance is what will truly change home care.
