Council introduces digital cloud-based platform to manage its community telecare system
East Renfrewshire Council has become the first local authority in Scotland to introduce a fully digital, cloud-based platform for handling its community alarm system, having partnered with a European telecare provider.
The local authority’s telecare system, in the form of a community alarm, provides a link from a resident’s home to a 24-hour response centre based within the community safety control room. The alarm allows the user to call for help in an emergency at the touch of a button.
The council is responsible for the call handling of East Renfrewshire’s telecare service, while the Health and Social Care Partnership (HSCP) manages the response team, which attends the user’s home when the alarm is raised.
By 2025, telephone companies in the UK are switching off analogue telephone services and replacing it with digital internet-based technology. To enable the council to continue to provide the telecare call-handling service to over 3,000 residents, sourcing compatible and future-proof call centre technology was vital.
Service users and their relatives have been contacted over the past year to let them know about the change and how it will affect them.
East Renfrewshire Council Leader Owen O’Donnell said: “To allow us to migrate our customers over to digital alarms, we needed to change the alarm call handling solution to one that was cloud based and fully digital. It had to be able to receive digital calls from a wide variety of digital alarms without needing to use the soon-to-be-obsolete analogue phone lines.
“It’s fantastic that East Renfrewshire is leading the way in introducing this technology to ensure a seamless transition to this new digital service.”
Partnering with Enovation, a European provider involved in monitoring the wellbeing of over 1.4 million telecare users, the council has now replaced its SafetyNet alarm receiving centre.
All East Renfrewshire’s telecare users are already switched over to the new alarm call-handling solution, allowing a phased change-over to digital devices in residents’ homes to be completed before the switch-off date in 2025.
Telecare users will be supported to transfer to a digital service, even if the home does not have a digital phone line or broadband; the team will utilise SIM cards to ensure access to the telecare service.
Recently, South Lanarkshire Council awarded Careium its telecare equipment contract, as part of a project to migrate its community alarm clients to a digital telecare solution.