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Will 'A Call A Day' Help the Squeezed
Sandwich Generation and the Senior Baby
Boomers?
New program offers 'A Call A Day' across the
USA to help those with senior and vulnerable
relatives
April 5, 2011--As
the post-war baby boom rapidly escalates
into the seniors boom, the new middle-aged
increasingly face a triangular struggle
between helping their adolescent or grown-up
offspring, coping with the responsibilities
which arrive as their own parents age and
meeting the demands of the home and
workplace.
With government assistance unlikely to be
able to keep pace, the situation is offering
considerable opportunities for the private
sector to develop further services to both
support the aging boomers and to ease the
pressure on their families.
One such new venture is Call Concern. This
is a start-up which offers "A Call A Day
Program" directed mainly at seniors and the
infirm. The program operates on a monthly
subscription basis.
Subscribers can have their relatives called
every day of a year except Sundays and be
called in turn if no answer is obtained
after three calls in any one day. It is not
a medical type service, but brands itself as
"the new neighbor next door."
The company seeks to follow in the tradition
of old-style neighborliness, when someone
could be relied upon to call around each day
just to check for an answer, share a few
words and confirm that all seems to be okay.
The founder, Maggy Young,
derived the idea from the time of the
property boom at the turn of the century.
She recalls how she purchased a flat which
was being sold by a nearby relative of a
deceased elderly lady.
She heard from the neighbors how the old
lady had apparently been dead for over three
months until suspicions were aroused and a
forced entry was made. She said, "It always
stuck in my mind how sad this all was."
From the memory of that sad flat, Call
Concern was born.
She explains, "I read that Guy Kawaski (the
venture capitalist and web entrepreneur)
said that you should look for a wrong to
right, look for a problem to solve and help
to answer it. I thought about how the people
close to her almost certainly never realized
how few callers that old lady locked in her
flat sometimes had and wondered if she might
have survived if a 'no answer' had been
detected earlier ... if she had had any
callers of any sort. And this is the social
angle to Call Concern: People think
neighbors, friends drop by for a chat, but
maybe not as frequently as they like to
believe."
The website is at http://www.callconcern.com/
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