Business Standard

Toyota launches robot to keep elderly mobile

- NAOMI TAJITSU 12 April REUTERS

Toyota Motor said it will commercial­ise rehabilita­tion robots later this year when it makes its robotic walk assist system available for rent, joining Honda Motor in marketing mobility devices for Japan’s ageing population.

A decade after it began developing rehabilita­tion robots, the world’s No.2 automaker on Wednesday said the system would be ready to hit the market by the end of 2017, two years after Honda launched a similar device.

Hospitals and other care providers would be able to rent the system, designed for patients with lower limb paralysis, for 350,000 yen ($3,196.93) per month plus an initial fee of 1 million yen.

“The (system) will help to provide assistance to the elderly by enabling them to live more independen­t lives and to also provide support for their caregivers,” Toyota said.

Japan is greying faster than the rest of the world, with the number of people aged 65 or older accounting for 26.7 per cent of the population in 2015, dwarfing the global average of about 8.5 per cent.

Demand for aged-care services has boomed as the shrinking working population means that fewer able-bodied adults are available to look after the elderly.

Globally, sales of robots for elderly and handicap assistance will total about 37,500 units in 20162019, and are expected to increase substantia­lly within the next 20 years, according to the Internatio­nal Federation of Robotics.

In 2015, Honda launched a rental service for its mobility contraptio­n. Worn around the waist and attached to the thighs, it helps patients improve their stride.

Such systems are a new frontier for major automakers, which are already competing to develop self-driving cars with an eye on the elderly as a major future market.

Toyota has invested heavily in artificial intelligen­ce as part of its push into self-driving cars, and has said it may become a maker of AI robots to help the elderly.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? A decade after it began developing rehabilita­tion robots, Toyota said on Wednesday the system would be ready to hit the market by the end of 2017, two years after Honda launched a similar device
PHOTO: REUTERS A decade after it began developing rehabilita­tion robots, Toyota said on Wednesday the system would be ready to hit the market by the end of 2017, two years after Honda launched a similar device

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