Modern Australian
The Times

AI companies promise to ‘fix’ aged care, but they’re selling a false narrative

  • Written by Barbara Barbosa Neves, Senior Horizon Fellow, AI and Ageing, University of Sydney
AI companies promise to ‘fix’ aged care, but they’re selling a false narrative

Australia’s Royal Commission into Aged Care found a broken system. Now, technology companies are promising artificial intelligence (AI) will fix everything, from staff shortages to older people’s loneliness.

This is known as agetech, an industry projected to reach a global value of A$170 billion by 2030. But its promised “fixes” obscure what is actually breaking aged care.

In our new study, we analysed how 33 agetech companies selling AI for aged care in Australia, East Asia, Europe and North America market their products, including monitoring tools and companion robots.

We found their websites, promotional materials and product descriptions depict aged care as inefficient, understaffed and overwhelmed by a growing ageing population. Older people are too frail or too many. Care workers are overstretched. Human care is flawed.

And AI is presented as the answer. As the agetech industry grows, governments are also subscribing to this vision of technological rescue.

Yet our research shows these narratives distract from structural problems and reinforce ageism, even as Australia’s new Aged Care Act commits to a stronger focus on dignity and autonomy.

Before we accept AI as the cure, we need to understand what we are being sold.

The cure on offer

The companies we studied claim AI will predict falls before they happen, detect health changes humans miss, eliminate incompetence, and deliver “unprecedented” improvements in safety and quality.

It sounds revolutionary. But it is also a carefully constructed narrative. In the marketing materials, aged care is consistently framed as a failure of efficiency and public delivery.

Promotional images show older people sitting passively, struggling with mobility aids, or being reduced to body parts attached to monitoring devices. They are represented through statistics: fall rates, malnutrition prevalence, hospitalisation risk.

According to the companies, older people are incidents waiting to happen and data sources to be mined. One company promises to transform intimate daily activities such as showering into “trackable metrics” for “optimal care”.

Care workers fare no better. Their labour is “time-consuming” and “error-prone”. With AI as the solution, care workers become the problem: well-meaning but unreliable, requiring technological oversight. Several companies market systems that track staff movements and automatically report delays to managers.

The rise of techno-solutionism

Agetech companies selling their wares paint the aged care sector as fundamentally broken, plagued by rising costs and inefficiencies.

By contrast, AI systems – featuring 24/7 monitoring, predictive analytics and automated alerts – are presented as objective and inherently superior.

This narrative reflects techno-solutionism: presenting social problems in ways that make technical fixes appear inevitable.

But AI is far from neutral. Models used to train AI are frequently based on datasets that exclude older people or overrepresent younger and healthier groups. Both AI design and implementation rely on stereotypical ideas of older people as technophobic and passive.

AI is not the salvation

The aged care crisis stems from decades of social and political choices about how we value care and ageing. The royal commission documented this in detail: systemic neglect, regulatory failures, a funding model that incentivises cost-cutting over quality, and pervasive societal ageism.

AI solutionism frames the crisis as technical rather than social or political, burying the fact that broader reforms are needed.

AI systems are said to eliminate work. But they require substantial human labour to function and can create as much work as they remove.

Care staff must learn new systems, interpret data, and respond to constant notifications and false alarms. They suddenly have to oversee technologies that need ongoing calibration and maintenance.

Studies show this increases worker stress, as staff juggle care responsibilities with tech troubleshooting – all with limited training and time. Much of this labour remains invisible.

Alongside this, the relational aspects of care – noticing subtle changes in mood, building trust over time – get marginalised because they can’t be easily measured or automated.

Older people suffer the consequences. When care is organised around efficiency metrics and cost reduction, residents become problems to be managed rather than people with diverse histories, preferences and needs.

No single tech will fix this

Aged care faces serious challenges. It does need repair – but the fixes must take many forms, most of which have nothing to do with AI.

These include staff ratios that allow proper time for meaningful conversations, helping residents feel less lonely. Wages that reflect the value and complexity of care work. Funding models that prioritise dignity, agency and authentic participation in decisions about care.

Regulatory frameworks must hold providers accountable for quality of life, wellbeing and inclusion, not just compliance metrics. Aged care should also include community-based models that keep older people connected to neighbourhoods.

The best role AI can play is through supporting care practices that include and empower older people and staff, centring their voices and experiences.

If we let AI companies define what is broken, we also let them define what repair looks like. That may leave our systems more profitable, but far less caring and humane.

The authors acknowledge Naseem Ahmadpour, Alex Broom and Kalervo Gulson from the University of Sydney for their contributions to the research project.

Authors: Barbara Barbosa Neves, Senior Horizon Fellow, AI and Ageing, University of Sydney

Read more https://theconversation.com/ai-companies-promise-to-fix-aged-care-but-theyre-selling-a-false-narrative-275822

Why Regular Skills Updates Are Essential for Licensed Security Officers

A guard at a Brisbane shopping centre gets a call about a shoplifter who's turned aggressive.  They’ve done the job for six years. But their de-...

10 Benefits of Choosing Professional Tutoring Penrith Services

Every student has unique learning strengths, challenges, and academic goals. While classroom teaching provides essential knowledge and structure, so...

Sunshine Coast Baby Classes Prove Big Hit Among First-Time Mums

There's a movement gaining traction on the Sunshine Coast, providing a village of support, socialisation and relief for first-time mothers and babie...

Father's Day Gift Ideas for Men Who Are Hard to Buy For

Some dads are easy to buy for. Others do not want anything, already have everything, or give you the classic "don't worry about me" answer every yea...

Top 5 Mistakes That Wear Out Your Brakes Faster

Brakes don't need frequent replacements like oil changes do.   But a lot of the wear happens quietly, over months, because of habits most drivers...

Plantation Shutters vs Curtains: Which Is Better for Your New Home?

Moving into a new home is an exciting opportunity to personalise your space and make it your own. While many homeowners focus on furniture, flooring...

Celebration of Life vs Traditional Funeral: What's the Difference?

When saying goodbye to someone you love, there is no single way to honour their life. Every family has different traditions, beliefs, and preference...

Building Approval for Roofing Projects: What Homeowners Need to Know

Roofing projects are an important part of maintaining and protecting your home. Whether you're repairing storm damage, replacing an ageing roof, or ...

Chatswood Tutoring And Its Role In Academic Achievement

Academic success often requires more than classroom attendance alone. Students face increasing expectations as they progress through school, particu...

Why Laser Hair Removal Treatments Continue Growing In Popularity

Managing unwanted hair can become time-consuming and frustrating for many people, especially when shaving, waxing, and other temporary methods requi...

Choosing the Right Devices for a Flexible Workplace

For IT leaders managing large fleets, the device layer is where workforce productivity and security policy meet. The shift towards flexible and hybrid...

How Business Advisory Services Help Companies Achieve Sustainable Growth

Every business owner aims to build a profitable and sustainable organisation. While dedication, innovation, and hard work are important, achieving l...

Why Body Contouring Has Become A Popular Cosmetic Treatment

Many people maintain healthy lifestyles through regular exercise and balanced eating habits but still struggle with stubborn areas of fat that are d...

How to Choose the Right POS Hardware for Your Business in Australia

A lot of Australian business owners spend weeks researching POS software but buy hardware almost as an afterthought. That's a mistake. The wrong har...

Why Material Handling Hose Is Critical for Industrial Efficiency

A high-performance material handling hose is an essential component in industries that transport abrasive, dry, or bulk materials on a daily basis...

How to Choose the Right Lawyer in Melbourne for Your Situation

Choosing legal support can feel difficult, especially when the stakes are personal or business-related. The right lawyer in Melbourne should underst...

Hoteliers Look to Clever Value Adds to Increase Revenue

The Australian hospitality industry is still in recovery mode after a notoriously rough patch in recent years. While there has been a post-COVID tra...

Moving to Queensland? Here’s How to Prep Your Car for the Big Move North

There’s no sign of the northern migration slowing down, with thousands of southerners fleeing from chaotic lifestyles and cooler climates for a brig...