Why FutureCare Exists
FutureCare wasn’t built from a market analysis. It was built from a family history of loss without warning — and a belief that technology could change the outcome.
The Story
Four generations ago, Kyle Steele’s great-great-grandmother Effie MacDonald died at 29 — leaving her six-year-old daughter Gladys with no one to watch over her. Gladys was sent to an orphanage. There was no early warning. No family alert. No technology that could have seen what was coming and given someone time to act. That six-year-old grew up, moved to Indiana, and eventually became the great-great-grandmother of the person who built FutureCare.
The Pattern
Two generations before that, Peter MacPhee — another ancestor — was lost when his ship went down in the Great Lakes, leaving behind seven children. Loss without warning. Families separated by the absence of information at the moment it mattered most. FutureCare was built to close that gap.
The Mission
We build the invisible infrastructure that keeps families connected, caregivers informed, and homes that know the difference between a good day and a crisis. No cameras. No wearables. No burden on the person being monitored. Just a home that knows — so the people who love them have time to act.
What is the FutureCare mission?
FutureCare Solutions Group exists so that aging feels like living — not like waiting. We build passive AI monitoring that detects changes in daily routine before they become health crises, giving families and care professionals the early warning that changes outcomes. Founded by Kyle and Sarah Steele, installed by Global Wave Integration.