

06 May 2026
In a sheltered housing scheme in Essex, a community of residents aged 50 and over found themselves in a sadly not uncommon situation. Their housing association had abandoned the scheme, leaving them without management, utilities oversight, or operational safety equipment. Residents, many of them retired, were suddenly responsible for identifying who was paying gas, electricity, water bills and for getting those services back online.
When a resident-elected committee established itself and appointed a scheme manager, GBR Digital Health contacted the scheme to assess the situation. Upon inspection, it was clear that the existing communal alarm system was completely non-operational, yet residents were still being billed monthly by their previous monitoring provider for a service that was not functioning.
This is not an isolated case. GBR's research has identified that approximately 60% of council sheltered housing schemes across England have either not started or not completed the transition to digital-compliant alarm systems ahead of the national analogue-to-digital telephone network switchover. For vulnerable adults living in sheltered housing, this is not an administrative inconvenience, it is a matter of life and death.
GBR Digital Health's objectives for this intervention were:
GBR Digital Health conducted a full site assessment and advised the resident committee on the scope of work required for a complete, compliant digital system upgrade including new communal alarms, a modern door entry system, and digital monitoring infrastructure. However, given the significant capital costs involved, costs that had already been quoted to the committee at a inflated level by another provider, a phased approach was proposed.
As an immediate interim solution, GBR installed emergency digital dispersed alarms into key residents' properties. These devices:
Critically, the monthly cost of the dispersed alarm monitoring service was lower than the billing that residents had been paying for their non-operational legacy system, delivering immediate financial savings alongside immediate safety benefits.
The impact of GBR's intervention was felt almost immediately and in the most critical way possible.
Shortly after the dispersed alarms were installed, a male resident experienced a serious medical emergency.
He was found by his partner in a state of severe respiratory distress, delirious, struggling to breathe, and showing signs of organ shutdown. His partner activated the GBR emergency dispersed alarm.
The GBR monitoring centre responded immediately, coordinating an emergency ambulance. Paramedics arrived in time and the resident was taken to hospital, where he received life-saving treatment.
In the assessment of those closest to the situation, without the GBR alarm in place that night, this resident would not have survived.
Additional outcomes from show:
"The digital switchover is not a future problem, it is a present crisis for a large proportion of sheltered housing schemes across the country. At GBR, we don't wait for the perfect budget to act. We deliver compliant, life-saving solutions now, and build the path to full upgrade alongside our clients." — Liam Bond - GBR Digital Health, Head of Business Development
The analogue telephone network, which powers the majority of legacy community alarm systems across the UK, is being retired in January 2027. All housing providers and local authorities operating traditional alarm infrastructure must upgrade to digital alternatives. GBR Digital Health's research indicates that 60% of council sheltered housing schemes have not yet completed or even begun this transition.
For commissioners and housing managers, the risk is clear. Residents in non-compliant schemes may be paying for alarm systems that will fail to connect when an emergency arises. GBR's dispersed digital alarm solution provides a proven, affordable, and rapidly deployable bridge protecting lives while longer-term upgrade programmes are developed and funded.
GBR Digital Health is ready to support housing providers, local authorities, and commissioners with:
Contact GBR Digital Health:
Website: www.gbrdigitalhealth.co.uk