What does CPI Security offer for medical alert and life safety in 2027?
Direct Answer
CPI Security offers a genuinely integrated life safety stack for 2027: a monitored medical alert pendant (single-press, double-press, and press-and-hold actions to cut false alarms), a smart Fire Communicator that detects both smoke and rapid heat rise, a self-testing carbon monoxide detector with battery backup, a flood and water leak sensor, and panic buttons that hand off to CPI's 24/7 Central Monitoring Station in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Everything routes through the CPI inTouch app and the same monitored account as the security system, which is what makes CPI tighter and more responsive than a bolted-on Life Alert pendant or a generic standalone medical alert. For the Southeast US elderly population, who skew heavily toward single-family homes, multi-generation households, and hurricane-exposed counties, this integrated approach delivers faster dispatch, fewer dropped calls, and one bill instead of three.
1. CPI's Life Safety Product Suite
CPI's life safety lineup is a coordinated set of monitored devices, not a catalog of stand-alone gadgets. The Medical Pendant is the headline product: a waterproof, wearable button that triggers a signal to CPI's Central Monitoring Station. CPI lets users configure single-press, double-press, and press-and-hold behavior, which is a meaningful win for elderly users who tend to bump pendants while sleeping or getting dressed.
The most common configuration uses press-and-hold for a real emergency and a double-press for a check-in, cutting accidental dispatches significantly.
The Fire Communicator handles smoke and heat together. Smoke-only alarms miss flash fires that begin with rapid temperature rise (electrical fires in walls, grease fires in kitchens), so CPI pairs photoelectric smoke sensing with heat-rise detection. Two heat-only models are also available: a 135 degree Fahrenheit unit for kitchens and garages where steam and dust would fool a smoke sensor, and a 194 degree Fahrenheit unit rated for attics and storage rooms.
The carbon monoxide detector is self-testing with a battery backup that keeps the radio link alive through power outages, which matters in hurricane country where grid drops are routine.
Round out the stack with a water and flood sensor (basements, water heaters, washing machines, under sinks) and the panic button built into the wall panel. Every device reports through CPI's Central Monitoring Station, which is owned and operated by CPI rather than outsourced to a third party.
Industry monitoring benchmarks sit around 30 to 45 seconds; CPI publicly markets sub-30-second average response in the Southeast. Pricing starts around 30 to 50 dollars per month for monitored coverage with the pendant added as a small device fee, which lands competitively against a standalone Life Alert subscription that does nothing else.
2. Where CPI Beats Standalone Medical Alert
Life Alert, MobileHelp, and Medical Guardian all do one thing: monitor a pendant. They charge 30 to 60 dollars per month for that one thing, and the pendant only talks to a medical dispatch desk. If your house is on fire, the pendant has no idea.
If carbon monoxide is climbing while you sleep, the pendant has no idea. If the basement is flooding from a burst hurricane-fed water heater, the pendant has no idea. You end up paying three separate companies for three separate monitored services that never talk to each other.
CPI collapses that into one monitored account. When the pendant fires, the same operator who is watching the smoke, CO, flood, and intrusion sensors picks up the call, which means richer context for the responder ("medical alert plus active smoke alarm" gets a very different dispatch than "medical alert alone").
The inTouch app shows family members real-time activity, motion absence patterns, and a full audit log, which Life Alert simply does not surface.
Battery and connectivity are the other quiet wins. Life Alert's older pendants drop off Wi-Fi and rely on landline base stations that many Southeast homes no longer have. CPI ships LTE cellular communicators with battery backup as standard, so the link survives both power and internet outages.
For elderly users in rural North Carolina or coastal South Carolina, that resilience is the difference between a working pendant and a paperweight during the exact storm when help is needed most. Multi-generation households also benefit from shared inTouch access: an adult child in Charlotte can confirm a parent in Asheville triggered the pendant before EMS even rolls.
3. Best Use Cases for CPI Life Safety
The clearest fit is the elderly homeowner aging in place. A 78-year-old widow in Greensboro who is otherwise independent gets a monitored pendant, a smoke and CO stack, and motion-absence rules (no motion in the kitchen by 10 AM triggers a family check-in). The setup runs on the same bill as the existing security system and quietly upgrades safety without forcing the homeowner to learn new apps.
Multi-generation homes are the second strong case. A 45-year-old in Raleigh with both kids and a parent under one roof can hand the parent a pendant, put a Fire Communicator in the in-law suite, drop a flood sensor under the laundry, and watch everything from one app. The pendant's press-and-hold logic keeps grandkids from triggering false alarms by playing with it.
Rural North Carolina deserves special mention. EMS response times outside the Triangle and Charlotte metros can run 15 to 25 minutes, so every saved second at the monitoring desk counts. CPI's local Charlotte monitoring center routes faster than national medical alert call centers that have to look up the county before dispatching.
Hurricane country, post-Helene, is the final and most urgent use case. Western North Carolina, upstate South Carolina, and the Florida panhandle saw devastating 2024 and 2025 storm seasons that exposed how fragile single-purpose medical alert pendants are when power and broadband both fail.
CPI's cellular backup, integrated flood detection, and Central Monitoring Station inside the storm region itself give Southeast elderly homeowners a meaningfully more resilient safety net heading into 2027.
FAQ
Q: Does CPI's medical pendant work outside the home like a mobile GPS pendant? A: The standard pendant is range-limited to the home and surrounding yard via the base station. CPI focuses on aging-in-place coverage rather than out-of-home mobile alerts, which is the right call for the Southeast homeowner demographic.
Q: Can I add a medical pendant to an existing CPI security account? A: Yes. CPI sells the pendant as an add-on device to any monitored CPI plan, and it shares the same inTouch app, monitoring center, and cellular backup as the rest of the system.
Q: Does CPI handle fire alarm monitoring for businesses too? A: Yes. CPI runs commercial fire alarm monitoring out of the same Charlotte station, including UL-listed monitoring for code-required commercial fire systems.