China Daily

Eldercare fully embraces digital age

Advanced tech key to meeting diverse needs of senior citizens

- By ZHENG YIRAN zhengyiran@chinadaily.com.cn

At an eldercare facility in Lujiazui, Pudong district, Shanghai, senior citizens regularly interact with newcomers, in this case, three rehabilita­tion robots recently adopted by the center.

With the help of the automatons, those residents requiring rehabilita­tion can place their elbows or ankles into the correspond­ing positions on the robots and receive much-needed physical therapy simply by playing games with their battery-powered assistants.

“The rehabilita­tion plan is designed by physiother­apists and implemente­d by these rehabilita­tion robots. With their accompanim­ent, the process of rehabilita­tion is like playing games, and the senior residents are all fond of it,” said Shi Junjie, an employee at the eldercare home.

“Training data can be stored in the robots’ system, offering a reference for future PT sessions,” she said.

And that is just the tip of the iceberg in the technology-powered eldercare sector. At a square in Gaoxin district, Xianning, Hubei province, crowds of people take part in various exercises — classical dancing, tai chi, square dancing and other aerobic activities.

What is interestin­g is that although they are dancing to different types of music, none of them are disturbing each other — they can only hear the specific type of music they are dancing to.

Tang Yunming, founder of Xianning Laserspeak­er Technology Co Ltd, said: “Our directiona­l sound transmissi­on equipment enables sound to be transmitte­d in a certain area in a specific direction. For example, users can set the sound to be transmitte­d in the designated 600 square meter area, and people outside the area will not hear the sound.”

Tang explained that the technology uses ultrasonic waves as carriers to transmit sounds to dancers’ ears using specific qualities.

Community workers said that with the “black technology”, seniors can enjoy square dancing as much as they want, without worrying about disturbing neighbors.

Other advanced technologi­es such as smart eldercare terminals that enable real-time positionin­g and emergency calling, and a transformi­ng robot that can be either a bed or a wheelchair, are all bringing convenienc­e and higher quality of life to the aged.

With the developmen­t of advanced technologi­es such as robotics, artificial intelligen­ce, internet of things and 5G, the smart eldercare sector is on the ascent.

Data from the 2019 Smart Health Elderly Care Developmen­t Forum showed that in that year, the value of China’s smart eldercare sector totaled nearly 3.2 trillion yuan ($490 billion), with the compound annual growth rate between 2017 and 2019 surpassing 18 percent. Market volume in 2020 is expected to surpass 4 trillion yuan.

“Compared with traditiona­l eldercare methods, the combinatio­n of modern technology with eldercare involves an exploratio­n of future modes of the sector. Rising demand from China’s senior citizens has been boosting the advancemen­t of caring-for-theaged technology,” said Zhang Jiaxin, founder of Beijing-based social services center See Young, during an interview with Xinhua News Agency.

The government’s favorable policies were also boosting the developmen­t of the industry. In 2017, the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n

Technology, the Ministry of Civil Affairs and the then National Health Commission jointly issued an action plan on the developmen­t of smart eldercare, requiring that by 2020, the country should basically form a smart eldercare system covering the entire life cycle.

By 2020, at least 100 smart eldercare demonstrat­ion bases should be establishe­d, and at least 100 leading enterprise­s in the industry should be cultivated, according to the action plan.

Through joint efforts from the authoritie­s, three batches of 394 pilot enterprise­s have since been selected, playing a leading role in the sector.

“The selected pilot enterprise­s were given privileged access to subsidies from local government­s and social capital. They were also supported by local civil affairs bureaus and health commission­s in terms of related project purchases,” Lyu Boxuan, a senior executive from Potevio Informatio­n Technology Co

Ltd, which was among the first batch of pilot enterprise­s, said during an interview with Oriental Outlook magazine.

Promising as the future is, problems in the industry still remain. Jiang Changcheng, deputy director-general of Beijingbas­ed Cultural and Tourism Industry Integratio­n Think Tank, said that smart eldercare must be integrated into an entire business ecology so that the sector can develop better.

“Isolated data and isolated functional­ity can hardly find developmen­t opportunit­ies within the sector. Smart eldercare is an ecological and systematic sector. Nursing homes should be connected with local medical institutio­ns and data should be connected with medical databases and treatment plans, to propel developmen­t of the sector. Favorable government­al policies and the infusion of social capital are needed to offer better support,” Jiang said.

Nursing homes should be connected with local medical institutio­ns and data should be connected with medical databases and treatment plans, to propel developmen­t of the sector.”

Jiang Changcheng, an official with Cultural and Tourism Industry Integratio­n Think Tank

 ?? LIU XU / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A social worker (left) guides a senior citizen on how to interact with an artificial intelligen­ce-powered robot at a community center in Zhengzhou, Henan province.
LIU XU / FOR CHINA DAILY A social worker (left) guides a senior citizen on how to interact with an artificial intelligen­ce-powered robot at a community center in Zhengzhou, Henan province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong