Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Acticheck is not an enterprise cybersecurity product in the conventional sense, but a connected personal safety and remote care system. Through a “life-saving wristband,” home base station, mobile app, and cloud-based calling service, it notifies family members, friends, or a backup response center when an older person living alone or someone with health risks experiences an emergency. It is closer to an IoT safety alert/remote care device.
The product offers three types of triggers: pressing the wristband button to send an SOS, automatic detection of serious falls, and morning/evening “I’m OK” vibration confirmations. Home and garden coverage is provided via an 869MHz base station, while Android/iPhone app connectivity can be used when away from home. The wristband is waterproof and can be worn in the shower and while sleeping. Its battery life is claimed to be one year, reducing the risk of not wearing it due to charging, as can happen with smartwatch-style devices. Alerts are sent to preset responders via phone, SMS, and email. Administrators can also adjust check-in times, add responders, view maps, activity charts, and recent events.
The annual plan is £275, including the first year of service, then £105/year thereafter. The monthly plan starts at £100, then £13.75/month with a minimum 12-month term. Households without broadband can choose a cellular base station, which requires a £20 device upgrade fee and a £30/year communication fee. A 24/7 backup call response center costs £50/year. The page states that users with long-term health conditions may be eligible for VAT exemption.
Its advantages are ease of use, no need for frequent charging, coverage across multiple scenarios including home, garden, and outdoors, and a responder model that prioritizes familiar contacts. The cost is usually lower than professional emergency intervention. The drawbacks are also clear: the fall detection algorithm cannot guarantee detection of every fall; use away from home depends on a mobile phone and cellular signal; the text does not disclose security certifications such as ISO, Cyber Essentials, or medical device certifications; and it does not offer enterprise integration capabilities such as API, SSO, or SIEM.
It is suitable for older people living alone in the UK, people with long-term health conditions, those at risk of mobility-related incidents, and their family members. It can be used for daily reassurance check-ins, getting help after a fall, and remotely observing activity. It is not suitable for enterprise buyers looking for cybersecurity capabilities such as firewalls, EDR, vulnerability management, or identity security.
The crawled text does not specify availability in China, delivery, mobile number calling, mobile network compatibility, or local response center support. The service and support are clearly UK-centered, so access from China and practical deployment feasibility should be considered unknown.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on acticheck.com official site.
acticheck.com is an United Kingdom Health provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach acticheck.com directly.