Residents, clients, patients, and the people who care for them in aged care settings are the living embodiment of resilience. Could their lifelong lessons also set the template for IT providers? John Sutherland, HammondCare’s Chief Information Officer, and Dave Stevens, Founder and Managing Director of Brennan, sat down with Aged Care Insite to find the answers.
Defined as ‘the capacity to withstand, adjust to, or recover from misfortune, difficulties, or change’, resilience is, in the words of the philosopher Alain de Botton, “A good half of the art of living.”
Resilience picks us up after knock-backs, conditions us to adapt to unavoidable change, and trains us to move on when we should. People in aged care settings and the staff who provide their care are the living embodiment of resilience.
Earlier this year, we made the case for IT maturity as the answer to today’s opportunities and tomorrow’s challenges in the aged care sector. But could resilience prove just as powerful?
In an era upended by digital transformation, an economy buffeted by unprecedented headwinds, and an aged care sector grappling with generational challenges, resilience and continuity have become operational necessities.