Abstract: The global aging population is expanding at an unprecedented rate, with projections indicating that 1.4 billion people will be aged 60 years or older by 2030 and 2.1 billion by 2050, placing immense pressure on healthcare systems worldwide. Artificial intelligence (AI)-powered wearable Internet of Health Things (IoHT) devices — including smartwatches, biosensors, and continuous health monitors — have emerged as transformative tools for real-time elderly health monitoring, fall detection, and predictive analytics. However, the massive collection of sensitive biometric data by these devices raises critical concerns regarding privacy, security, and governance that remain insufficiently addressed, particularly for elderly populations. This comprehensive review synthesizes evidence from 333 peer-reviewed articles published between 2018 and 2025 cross PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, IEEE Xplore, and Google Scholar to identify, analyze, and compare governance frameworks for AI-powered wearable IoHT in elderly care. The analysis reveals significant regulatory fragmentation across jurisdictions: while the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and AI Act provide the most comprehensive rights-based framework, the United States relies on a patchwork of sector-specific regulations with notable gaps for consumer wearables, and Asia-Pacific nations exhibit highly variable approaches ranging from mature (Singapore, Japan) to nascent (Indonesia, Malaysia). Elderly-specific provisions remain conspicuously absent across all regulatory regimes examined. This review proposes a novel five-layer integrative governance framework — the first to unify technical security, privacy protection, ethical AI governance, regulatory compliance, and person-centered governance specifically designed for elderly care contexts. The framework addresses unique vulnerabilities associated with cognitive decline, reduced digital literacy, and caregiver dependency. Findings underscore the urgent need for harmonized, age-sensitive regulatory approaches and privacy-preserving technologies such as federated learning and differential privacy to ensure that AI-powered wearable IoHT fulfills its promise of enhancing elderly healthcare without compromising dignity, autonomy, or data security. Plain Language Summary: Wearable health devices — such as smartwatches and fitness trackers powered by artificial intelligence — are increasingly used to monitor the health of older adults, tracking heart rate, blood oxygen, physical activity, and even detecting falls. While these devices can significantly improve care for elderly people, they also collect highly sensitive personal health data continuously, raising important questions about who can access this data, how it is protected, and what rules govern its use. This review examined 333 research studies to understand how different countries regulate the privacy and security of health data from these wearable devices, with a specific focus on elderly users. The findings show that no country currently has regulations specifically designed to protect older adults who use AI-powered health wearables. Older people face unique challenges — including memory difficulties, lower familiarity with technology, and reliance on caregivers — that make standard data protection rules insufficient. A new comprehensive framework is proposed to guide governments, device manufacturers, healthcare providers, and caregivers in protecting elderly users while enabling the benefits of wearable health monitoring technology. Keywords: internet of health things, IoHT, wearable AI, privacy governance, elderly care, data security, regulatory framework, risk management
Dharmansyah et al. (Wed,) studied this question.