With internet-connected sleep monitors, robotic arms and calorie-counting cafeteria plates, China’s elder care industry is hoping automation will provide the solution to an aging population and a shrinking workforce.
Hundreds of retirees were among visitors to a crowded industry fair in Shanghai this week, thronging booths touting everything from luxury retirement homes to physiotherapy robots.
China’s population has declined since 2022 after more than 60 years of uninterrupted growth, prompting fears of a future labor crunch and growing pressure on its health care system as millions of citizens enter old age.
Rather than relying on people—traditionally one’s children—to provide care, many of the fair’s exhibitors showcased technological attempts to solve the demographic conundrum.
Yu, a 64-year-old visitor, was among a crowd watching a company demonstrate its automated stair-climbing machines alongside devices designed to lift people from their beds into wheelchairs.
He told AFP he was impressed.
“Nowadays there are fewer and fewer young people, and more and more old people, so these smart products can provide better services for older people,” he said.
Yu said he had already purchased smart wheelchairs and beds for older family members, including a 90-year-old relative he was caring for.
Elsewhere, an array of smartwatches, motion detectors and temperature monitors at Shenzhen-based tech firm Innopro’s booth promised families constant surveillance of their elders.
Targeting busy workers or those living apart from their loved ones, the company also boasts nursing homes and local governments among its clients.
“For institutions, they hope to save on labor costs because they usually need to conduct checks every night,” employee Jin Guohui told AFP.
“This device can reduce their work,” Jin said, showing off a small, SIM card-equipped white box that monitored sleeping patterns and signs of life.
‘Figuring it out’
For customers of Eihoo Health Management, an operator of senior citizen cafeterias, it’s their dinner plates that keep watch: the plates are embedded with chips that identify the food being served.
A cash register at check-out reads the chips and delivers an instant nutritional report complete with calorie count and breakdown of macronutrients—cutting workloads for service staff and health workers.
Regular diners can set up payment cards that track their weight, nutritional habits and health status.
At another booth, students from Shanghai’s Jiao Tong University tinkered with the code for a robotic arm designed to help elders with limited mobility perform daily tasks such as eating and turning doorknobs.
The turn to high-tech solutions is a stark contrast to the traditional Chinese ideal of aging at home under the care of family members.
Shi Wenjun, a 73-year-old visitor, said there were “definite differences” for elderly Chinese today compared to previous generations.
“We are all parents of only children… our children are nearly 50 and they have their own work and families, so when we’re old, we will choose the elder care organizations provided by the government, group forms of elder care,” she told AFP.
“If older people can use smart technologies, they won’t bother others,” Shi said.
Shi, a volunteer who organizes activities for other seniors in her neighborhood, said she had caught up with many new technologies, including smartphones.
“But for a lot of things, we are still in the process of learning and figuring it out,” she said.
© 2024 AFP
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China elder care sector plugs smart gadgets to fill workforce gaps (2024, June 14)
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