Home Activity Awareness
Track expected daily movement and household activity using selected sensors placed in non-intrusive locations.
Good Shepherd Home Monitoring System helps families, caregivers, and care providers monitor daily activity patterns, detect important changes, and respond earlier when something may be wrong.
The platform is designed to make monitoring simple, scalable, and easier to understand for both families and operators.
Track expected daily movement and household activity using selected sensors placed in non-intrusive locations.
Flag missed routines, unusual inactivity, door events, and escalating combinations of signals before emergencies go unnoticed.
Review multiple clients or locations from one interface, see alert status instantly, and drill down when action is needed.
Good Shepherd combines off-the-shelf devices, event tracking, and behavior-based monitoring into one operational flow.
Set up approved cameras, motion sensors, door sensors, or wearables based on the client’s comfort level and care goals.
Observe daily patterns over time so the system can identify what normal activity looks like for that home.
Watch for meaningful changes like no breakfast activity, missed hallway movement, unusual overnight motion, or lack of response.
Escalate alerts to family, caregivers, or support staff so someone can check in before a problem becomes a crisis.
Example positioning for a future rollout. You can adjust these tiers later based on equipment, response model, and market fit.
For families wanting simple visibility into household routine and activity confirmation.
For homes that need broader monitoring, stronger escalation logic, and more active oversight.
For agencies or operators managing multiple clients, staff response, and larger monitoring dashboards.
This site is structured to position the platform as a modern, reassuring, technology-enabled monitoring solution for independent living. It works well as a starting point for investor discussions, stakeholder demos, or pre-launch marketing.