A recent study commissioned by LogicMark, Inc. reveals that walking alone at night is the most pervasive safety concern for women in America, with 67% of those surveyed identifying it as their top fear. This anxiety profoundly shapes daily decisions and behaviors, often more so than navigating unfamiliar areas or being alone in parking garages. The research, which surveyed 1,500 women, found that 55% reported feeling unsafe traveling in unfamiliar areas, while 42% expressed fear of being alone in parking garages or lots.
These fears are not isolated incidents but are etched into the lived experience of women across the country, influencing routine activities like the daily commute home from work. The anxiety runs deep enough to alter behavior, forcing many women to regularly reroute their commutes or change their schedules to reduce perceived risk. Younger women specifically reported higher levels of concern when using rideshares and public transit. Despite these endemic fears, women primarily rely on informal safety strategies such as sharing their location with friends or keeping emergency contacts informed, tactics that create vulnerabilities when phones are locked or attention is divided.
In response to these findings, LogicMark’s Aster app transforms smartphones into personal protection devices with direct lines to 24/7 monitoring, emergency services, and loved ones. The app offers four ways to call for help: an SOS button for instant alerts, a home screen slider for quick access to emergency services, a ‘Hold Until Safe’ button to arm the app, and the ‘Follow-Me’ feature to schedule alerts and check-ins. Loved ones added as followers are notified when emergency services are contacted and receive a message with the user’s current location.
Recognizing that phones may not always be accessible, Aster comes with a free Bluetooth SOS button when users sign up for a subscription. This small device, no bigger than an AirTag, clips to a purse, keychain, or backpack strap and allows users to call for help without touching their phone. A 24/7 monitoring service answers and stays on the phone until users feel safe. The button is easy to press and doesn’t require the phone to be unlocked or the app to be open, acting as a quick-access emergency device when coupled with the Aster app.
Women shouldn’t have to reroute their commutes or avoid evening walks, yet until broader societal change arrives, they need practical tools that work in the moment. LogicMark’s Aster app offers exactly that: a way to reclaim freedom without sacrificing safety. By transforming smartphones into personal safety devices, Aster puts help within immediate reach, empowering women across America to roam more freely after dark. The original release can be viewed on www.newmediawire.com, and further disclosures are available here.
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. The source URL for this press release is Walking Alone at Night Tops Women’s Safety Concerns, Driving Demand for Personal Security Solutions.
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