
The Resonance Test 17: Secretary Alice Bonner and is Laurance Stuntz, Director of MeHI
Nov 28, 2017
35:02
“Aging begins the moment we are born.”
This is the profound opening statement one finds on the webpage of Alice Bonner, Secretary of the Massachusetts office of Elder Affairs: http://www.mass.gov/elders/welcomewelcome.html.
When you consider aging an event of a lifetime—for you and every other member of humanity—you develop a thoughtful and creative attitude toward it. You treat it, in a way, like a continuous innovation project. Fact is, our bodies and minds do iterate themselves, incessantly. Being healthy, happy, and well requires, of course, a lifetime of attention, the proper mindset, and sometimes the help and support of other people—various sorts of interventions.
On this, the 17th installment of *The Resonance Test,* we dig deep into the innovations around aging and digital health. Joining Secretary Bonner for an invigorating discussion is Laurance Stuntz, the Director of the Massachusetts eHealth Institute at MassTech https://masstech.org/about/team/staff/laurance, and Continuum’s SVP, Mike Dunkley. Tune in, and hear Secretary Bonner and Stuntz remark:
• “Aging is not about old people; it’s about families and communities.” —Secretary Bonner
• “Humans are good at empathy, about caring, about so on; technology is really bad at that generally.”—Laurance Stuntz
• “If we don’t get people to start thinking about aging and longevity as a lifespan event, starting at the time that we’re born, then we miss the opportunity for people to, for example, start saving for retirement. Realize how much it *takes* to save for retirement.” — Secretary Bonner
• “Figure out where the cost is, and then follow that to a viable business model.” —Laurance Stuntz
• “People want to get older and stay and continue to live in the community that’s *home for them.*” —Secretary Bonner
Host: Pete Chapin
Editor: Kyp Pilalas
Producer: Ken Gordon
